Recent research has proposed that shifting education distributions across cohorts are influencing estimates of educational gradients in mortality. We use data from the United States and Finland covering four decades to explore this assertion. We base our analysis around our new finding: a negative logarithmic relationship between relative education and relative mortality. This relationship holds across multiple age groups, both sexes, two very different countries, and time periods spanning four decades. The inequality parameters from this model indicate increasing relative mortality differentials over time. We use these findings to develop a method that allows us to compute life expectancy for any given segment of the education distribution...
Significant reductions in mortality are reflected in strong increases in life expectancy particularl...
While increased life expectancy in the U.S. has been used as justification for raising the Social Se...
Background: Studies of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality consistently point to higher death ra...
Objective The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educational inequalities...
The educational gradient in life expectancy is well documented in the United States and in other low...
Objective: The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educational inequalitie...
Prior research has found socio-economic determinants such as education to affect health outcomes. Ye...
Because of the value that individuals place on health and longevity, levels of mortality are among t...
As life expectancy at birth in the United States approaches eighty years of age, educational differe...
The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educational inequalities in mortal...
A negative educational gradient has been found for many causes of death. This association may be par...
<div><p>Objective</p><p>The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educationa...
A negative educational gradient has been found for many causes of death. This association may be par...
Background: I examined age patterns and the role of shifting educational distributions in driving tr...
There is a positive association between education and longevity. Individuals with a university degre...
Significant reductions in mortality are reflected in strong increases in life expectancy particularl...
While increased life expectancy in the U.S. has been used as justification for raising the Social Se...
Background: Studies of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality consistently point to higher death ra...
Objective The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educational inequalities...
The educational gradient in life expectancy is well documented in the United States and in other low...
Objective: The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educational inequalitie...
Prior research has found socio-economic determinants such as education to affect health outcomes. Ye...
Because of the value that individuals place on health and longevity, levels of mortality are among t...
As life expectancy at birth in the United States approaches eighty years of age, educational differe...
The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educational inequalities in mortal...
A negative educational gradient has been found for many causes of death. This association may be par...
<div><p>Objective</p><p>The aim of this paper is to empirically evaluate whether widening educationa...
A negative educational gradient has been found for many causes of death. This association may be par...
Background: I examined age patterns and the role of shifting educational distributions in driving tr...
There is a positive association between education and longevity. Individuals with a university degre...
Significant reductions in mortality are reflected in strong increases in life expectancy particularl...
While increased life expectancy in the U.S. has been used as justification for raising the Social Se...
Background: Studies of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality consistently point to higher death ra...