Nonmarital Cohabitation, Marriage, and Health Among Adolescents and Young Adults

Michael Pollard, Kathleen Mullan Harris
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

A considerable amount of research has established that the married live longer, healthier lives than the previously- and never-married. Similar research on the health benefits of cohabitation is sparse, and virtually nonexistent from adolescence into young adulthood despite substantial levels of cohabitation at these ages. Using longitudinal data from Add Health (1995-2001/2002) and generalized linear model techniques the authors investigate the impact of nonmarital cohabitation and marriage on a range of physical and mental health indicators and health behaviors. They also consider the mechanisms through which cohabitation affects health (i.e., selection and protection) and contrast the health effects of cohabitation with those reported for marriage at these relatively early ages. Results indicate that the health benefits of marriage among this sample are weaker than expected based on previous studies of marriage and health, but broader than those for cohabitation. This is not unexpected given the relatively young ages of marriage in Add Health compared to other datasets containing respondents at older ages, which comprise much of the previous marriage and health literature. Cohabitors report lower physical health than married or single individuals, but that cohabiting males receive some mental health benefits relative to singles. Cohabiting men and women also engage in some better health behaviors than singles. There also appears to be some selection into cohabitation and marriage by individuals with relatively poor mental health and health behaviors that may contribute to the observed health differentials.
青少年和年轻人的非婚同居、婚姻和健康
相当多的研究已经证实,已婚者比未婚者和未婚者活得更长、更健康。关于同居对健康的好处的类似研究很少,而且几乎没有从青春期到成年早期的研究,尽管在这些年龄段有大量的同居。利用Add Health(1995-2001/2002)的纵向数据和广义线性模型技术,作者调查了非婚同居和婚姻对一系列身心健康指标和健康行为的影响。他们还考虑了同居影响健康的机制(即选择和保护),并将同居对健康的影响与在相对较早的年龄结婚所报告的健康影响进行了对比。结果表明,在这个样本中,婚姻对健康的好处比之前基于婚姻和健康的研究所预期的要弱,但比同居的研究范围更广。考虑到Add Health中的结婚年龄相对较低,这并不意外,因为其他数据集包含年龄较大的受访者,而年龄较大的受访者包含以前的大部分婚姻和健康文献。据报告,同居者的身体健康状况低于已婚或单身人士,但同居者的心理健康状况相对于单身人士有所改善。同居男女在某些方面也比单身男女更注重健康。心理健康和健康行为相对较差的人似乎也会选择同居和结婚,这可能是观察到的健康差异的原因之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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