Recent literature has documented a widening gap in mortality in the United States between individuals with high socioeconomic status (SES) and low SES. An important question is whether this trend will continue. In this paper we document trends and inequalities in the health status at ages 54 to 60 of individuals born between 1934 and 1959. We do so by using detailed subjective and objective measures of health in the Health and Retirement Study to examine contributors to mortality inequality and to forecast life expectancy. We found that the health of individuals 54 to 60 years old has generally declined in recent years. In particular, we found large increases in obesity rates, notable increases in diabetes and reported levels of pain, and l...
Background: Do inequalities in health by income increase or decrease with age? The empirical evidenc...
Background: Some of the most consistent evidence in favour of an association between income inequali...
Research in social epidemiology and medical sociology has consistently shown that people in lower so...
The prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and other health problems has increased in recent decades in th...
One of the most basic indicators of well-being is life expectancy. A large empirical literature has ...
Many recent studies point to increasing inequality in mortality in the U.S. over the past twenty yea...
The impact of SES on mortality is an established finding in mortality research. I examine, whether t...
This analysis uses data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to examine the sources of variati...
In this essay, we ask whether the distributions of life expectancy and mortality have become general...
As life expectancy at birth in the United States approaches eighty years of age, educational differe...
The impact of SES on mortality is an established fact. I examine if this impact decreases with incre...
Recent research has found, in some groups of Americans, dramatic increases in deaths due to drug ove...
[Excerpt] In a continuation of long-term trends, life expectancy has been steadily increasing in the...
There are inequalities in healthy life expectancy between ages 50 and 75 according to occupational p...
Income serves as an indicator of success relative to others, and provides individuals with resources...
Background: Do inequalities in health by income increase or decrease with age? The empirical evidenc...
Background: Some of the most consistent evidence in favour of an association between income inequali...
Research in social epidemiology and medical sociology has consistently shown that people in lower so...
The prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and other health problems has increased in recent decades in th...
One of the most basic indicators of well-being is life expectancy. A large empirical literature has ...
Many recent studies point to increasing inequality in mortality in the U.S. over the past twenty yea...
The impact of SES on mortality is an established finding in mortality research. I examine, whether t...
This analysis uses data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to examine the sources of variati...
In this essay, we ask whether the distributions of life expectancy and mortality have become general...
As life expectancy at birth in the United States approaches eighty years of age, educational differe...
The impact of SES on mortality is an established fact. I examine if this impact decreases with incre...
Recent research has found, in some groups of Americans, dramatic increases in deaths due to drug ove...
[Excerpt] In a continuation of long-term trends, life expectancy has been steadily increasing in the...
There are inequalities in healthy life expectancy between ages 50 and 75 according to occupational p...
Income serves as an indicator of success relative to others, and provides individuals with resources...
Background: Do inequalities in health by income increase or decrease with age? The empirical evidenc...
Background: Some of the most consistent evidence in favour of an association between income inequali...
Research in social epidemiology and medical sociology has consistently shown that people in lower so...