One of the most intractable problems in international health research is the lack of comparability of health measures across countries or cultures. We develop a cross-country measurement model for health, in which functional limitations, self‐reports of health, and a physical measure are interrelated to construct health indices. To establish comparability across countries, we define the measurement scales by the physical measure while other parameters vary by country to reflect cultural and linguistic differences in response patterns. We find significant cross‐country variation in response styles of health reports along with variability in genuine health that is related to differences in national income. Our health indices achieve satisfact...
Contains fulltext : 174720.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)PURPOSE: Self-r...
textabstractBackground: The validity, reliability and cross-country comparability of summary measure...
The comparative study of perceived physical and mental health in general—and the comparative study o...
One of the most intractable problems in international health research is the lack of comparability o...
Measuring population health is vital for creating effective health interventions and policies, infor...
Comparisons of health between countries are popular and useful, and often attract media attention. ...
We examined the health status of 171 countries by employing factor analysis on various national heal...
We examined the health status of 171 countries by employing factor analysis on various national heal...
The aim of this paper is to decompose cross-national differences in self-reported health into parts ...
Objective: Self-rated health (SRH) is widely used to compare population health across countries, but...
Background: Decision makers need to know whether health state values, an important component of summ...
Self-rated health (SRH) is a common health measurement in international research. Yet different vers...
This international comparative study analyses individual-level data derived from the World Values Su...
International audiencePurpose: Comparability of patient-reported outcome measures over different lan...
This is the author accepted manuscript.The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI...
Contains fulltext : 174720.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)PURPOSE: Self-r...
textabstractBackground: The validity, reliability and cross-country comparability of summary measure...
The comparative study of perceived physical and mental health in general—and the comparative study o...
One of the most intractable problems in international health research is the lack of comparability o...
Measuring population health is vital for creating effective health interventions and policies, infor...
Comparisons of health between countries are popular and useful, and often attract media attention. ...
We examined the health status of 171 countries by employing factor analysis on various national heal...
We examined the health status of 171 countries by employing factor analysis on various national heal...
The aim of this paper is to decompose cross-national differences in self-reported health into parts ...
Objective: Self-rated health (SRH) is widely used to compare population health across countries, but...
Background: Decision makers need to know whether health state values, an important component of summ...
Self-rated health (SRH) is a common health measurement in international research. Yet different vers...
This international comparative study analyses individual-level data derived from the World Values Su...
International audiencePurpose: Comparability of patient-reported outcome measures over different lan...
This is the author accepted manuscript.The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI...
Contains fulltext : 174720.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)PURPOSE: Self-r...
textabstractBackground: The validity, reliability and cross-country comparability of summary measure...
The comparative study of perceived physical and mental health in general—and the comparative study o...