This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general how would you rate your health? with typical response items being on a scale ranging from poor to excellent. Usually, the overwhelming majority of responses fall in either the middle category or the one immediately to the "right" of this (in the above example, good and very good). However, based on a wide range of other medical indicators, such favourable responses appear to paint an overly rosy picture of true health. The hypothesis here is that these "middle" responses have been, in some sense, inflated. That is, for whatever reason, a significant number of responders inaccurately report into these categories. We find a significant amount of...
Self-assessed health (SAH) measures are widely used in models of health and health inequalities. Suc...
Economists rely heavily on self-reported measures to examine the relationship between income and hea...
This paper explores reporting bias and heterogeneity in the measure of self-assessed health (SAH) us...
This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general h...
This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form “Overall, ho...
This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general h...
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the m...
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the m...
The use of self assessed health status as a measure of health is common in empirical research. We a...
We investigate the common assumption in applied research that reporting errors are negligible in var...
We investigate the common assumption in applied research that reporting errors are negligible in var...
© 2014, © 2014 Taylor & Francis. Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-as...
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the m...
The use of self assessed health status as a measure of health is common in empirical research. We an...
PURPOSE: We explored health differences between population groups who describe their health as excel...
Self-assessed health (SAH) measures are widely used in models of health and health inequalities. Suc...
Economists rely heavily on self-reported measures to examine the relationship between income and hea...
This paper explores reporting bias and heterogeneity in the measure of self-assessed health (SAH) us...
This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general h...
This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form “Overall, ho...
This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general h...
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the m...
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the m...
The use of self assessed health status as a measure of health is common in empirical research. We a...
We investigate the common assumption in applied research that reporting errors are negligible in var...
We investigate the common assumption in applied research that reporting errors are negligible in var...
© 2014, © 2014 Taylor & Francis. Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-as...
Despite concerns about reporting biases and interpretation, self-assessed health (SAH) remains the m...
The use of self assessed health status as a measure of health is common in empirical research. We an...
PURPOSE: We explored health differences between population groups who describe their health as excel...
Self-assessed health (SAH) measures are widely used in models of health and health inequalities. Suc...
Economists rely heavily on self-reported measures to examine the relationship between income and hea...
This paper explores reporting bias and heterogeneity in the measure of self-assessed health (SAH) us...