The Cause of Causes
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Mother Teresa, known for her work with the poor,
Source Mother Teresa best © copyright 2010,
Author Kingkongphoto & www.celebrity-photos.com
(CC BY-SA 2.0 Generic)
“Socioeconomic status is the most powerful predictor of disease, disorder, injury and mortality we have.”
– Tom Boyce, MD, Chief of Division of Developmental Medicine, Dept. of Pediatrics, UCSF
Epidemiologists term poverty the “cause of causes” because it underlies so many illnesses.
The life expectancy of an adult living at or below the federal poverty level ($11,770 per one-person household) in the Rust Belt or rural South is 7-8 years less than that of an individual making the average American income of $55,775 [1][9].
Race, Poverty, and Chronic Illness
Race further widens the gap. Chronic illnesses (responsible for 70% of the deaths in this country) show earlier onset and greater frequency in minority populations living in poverty [2].
According to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, Americans living in poverty suffer from depression at twice the rate of those not in poverty. Asthma, diabetes, hypertension, and heart attack rates are, also, higher among the poor [3].
And the United States is second to last among 29 developed countries ranked by child poverty rates – scoring worse than Poland, Latvia, Hungary, and Lithuania [4][5].
A Complex Relationship
The available data barely scratches the surface of the relationship between poverty and illness.
The relationship between poverty and depression is, we know, complex. Depression can both cause and be caused by poverty [6].
Other health problems may be influenced by the limited healthcare available to the poor, and the environmental conditions under which they live. Lead pipes, for example, are common in America’s inner cities [7].
The Most Toxic Aspect
But the sheer stress of poverty may be its most toxic aspect.
The countless traumas of poverty – the absence of a reliable source of income (and, therefore, a reliable source of nourishing food); the chronic instability, including frequent relocation and school transfers made necessary by eviction; the unsafe neighborhoods; the dilapidated housing; the inadequate schools; the constant disappointments; the lack of resources, role models for success, or means of escape – take a terrible toll.
Those traumas deprive a child of all hope. Later in life, the patterns of behavior they generate chain the children raised in poverty to the same destitution which held their parents captive [8].
“If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food, and one of you says to them, ‘Depart in peace, be warmed and filled,’ but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit?” (James 2: 15-16).
Thomas Aquinas famously argued that God is the First Cause – a cause unto Himself, and the origin of all other causes.
When we look into the face of poverty, we cannot help but wonder what role God plays. Can He not feel the same pity we do? Will He not intervene?
Yes, He can and will. That is why He put us here. We are not meant to recite homilies at the poor then pass them by, smug and self-satisfied. We are meant to share their burdens, meant to share their pain.
After all, Christ does. In fact, it is His face we see.
—
[1][2] University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), “Poor Health: When Poverty Becomes Disease” by Claire Conway, 1/6/16, https://www.ucsf.edu/news/2016/01/401251/poor-health.
[3][6] US News, “Americans in Poverty at Greater Risk for Chronic Health Problems” by Danielle Kurtzleben, 10/30/12, http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2012/10/30/americans-in-poverty-at-greater-risk-for-chronic-health-problems.
[4] UNICEF, Innocenti Report Card 11, “Children’s material well-being”, https://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/rc11_eng.pdf.
[5] Malaria, tuberculosis, and AIDs are responsible for about 18% of illness by the poor, worldwide. Treatable childhood diseases like polio, measles, and whooping cough make up another 5%. Respiratory infections take some 3.9 million lives annually. Diarrheal diseases, the result of inadequate sanitation, take an additional 1.8 million. See, World Health Organization (WHO), “Diseases of Poverty and the 10/90 Gap” by Philip Stevens, 11/04, http://www.who.int/intellectualproperty/submissions/InternationalPolicyNetwork.pdf.
[7] Huffington Post, “Poor Americans Face More Toxic Exposure”, 1/27/11, Updated 5/25/11, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/heres-life-inner-city/poor-americans-face-more-_b_814847.html.
[8] National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTS), Family-Informed Trauma Treatment Center (FITT), “Understanding the impact of trauma and urban poverty on family systems: Risks, resilience and interventions” by Collins, K., Connors, K., Davis, S., Donohue, A., Gardner, S., Goldblatt, E., Hayward, A., Kiser, L., Strieder, and Thompson, E., 2010, http://www.nctsnet.org/sites/default/files/assets/pdfs/understanding_the_impact_of_trauma.pdf.
[9] Since this post was first published, the federal poverty level has been increased to $14,580 per one-person household, and the average American income risen to $67,521. See, US Dept. of Health and Human Services, ASPE, “Poverty Guidelines”, https://aspe.hhs.gov/topics/poverty-economic-mobility/poverty-guidelines, and Wisevoter, “Average Income by State”, https://wisevoter.com/state-rankings/average-income-by-state/.
Originally posted 10/23/16
READERS CAN FIND MY VIEWS ON ABUSE AND ABUSE-RELATED ISSUES AT ANNA WALDHERR A Voice Reclaimed, Surviving Child Abuse
https://avoicereclaimed.com

You have researched the causes and problems of child poverty very well and made them clear. One must not lose hope that there is a higher order that will balance things out. LG M.
Ich stimme zu, Marie. Bis dahin müssen wir alle unseren Teil beitragen. ❤
Excellent post, giving great perspective, Anna. It stirred my heart. Let me do what I can where God has put me until he calls me home.
Thank you, Erroll. That is my prayer, too.
In a perfect world, one in which we do not reside, lack would be eradicated by the generosity of those more fortunate. Since that will never happen this side of Heaven, it is up to each of us to do what we can to ease the suffering of others.
Pointing them to Jesus Christ, in addition to providing much needed temporal necessities, will go a long way in easing the plight of the poor. It may not be the end all solution, but it certainly will help.
You are so right, Ron.
Simple truths yet profoundly insightful. Unfortunately, the answer the political left supplies is more welfare which keeps the poverty class more chained (dependent) and very little in the way of self-empowerment. Instead of uplifting avenues, the level cultivates the dead end sense of victimhood which creates hate which is a planned diversion of thought preventing the poverty class from availing themselves to advancement via opportunities for improvement.
That is certainly part of the problem. Even more fundamental, I think, is the abandonment of biblical principles.
Our society no longer values devotion to God, marriage, child-rearing, education, hard work, modest living, saving, or community. The attainment of wealth and power — by whatever means, at whatever cost to others — are the focus, w/ constant distraction a necessity to fill the emptiness.
The family is disintegrating. At least 40% of today’s children are born out of wedlock. See, https://www.childstats.gov/americaschildren21/family2.asp. About 50% of the rest see their parents divorce. See, https://legaljobs.io/blog/children-of-divorce-statistics/. About 30% of parents owed child support receive nothing at all. See, https://usafacts.org/articles/how-much-child-support-do-parents-actually-receive/.
Meanwhile, many children are being raised without a father in their lives. Statistically, this makes them more prone to drop out of school, have children of their own out of wedlock, become involved with illegal drugs, engage in criminal behavior, and live in poverty. See, https://www.all4kids.org/news/blog/a-fathers-impact-on-child-development/.
Little wonder that Christ said the poor we will always have with us.