Health Risk Factors Among the Older European Populations: Personal and Country Effects

Teresa García-Muñoz, S. Neuman, T. Neuman
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

It is now common to use the individual's self-assessed-health-status (SAHS) as a measure of health. The use of SAHS is supported by numerous studies that show that SAHS is a better predictor of mortality and morbidity than medical records. The 2011 wave of the rich Survey of Health Aging and Retirement Europe (SHARE) is used for the exploration of the full spectrum of factors behind the health-status in 16 European countries, focusing on behavioral risk factors (smoking, alcohol consumption and obesity) – both at the individual and country levels. The main findings are: (i) SAHS regressions provide clear evidence of the significant effects of the three behavioral risk factors on the individual's SAHS, beyond and above effects of health conditions and of socio-economic personal variables; (ii) the second, more innovative, finding is related to the effects of country-specific risk factors (country-level measures of smoking, obesity, and alcohol consumption) on the subjective-health of the residents, controlling for personal characteristics. Adapting the technique presented in Oswald and Wu (2010), country effects derived from the SAHS regression are examined for correlations with a set of objective country macro measures. They include: share of smokers on a daily/regular basis; alcohol consumption (per-capita liters per year); share of obese individuals in the country. It appears that country-level smoking and obesity affect negatively aggregate country SAHS, while alcohol consumption has no effect. It is therefore not only 'who you are' that affects the subjective rating of health, but also 'in which country you live': both individual and country-level risk factors affect subjective-health and the two levels of behavioral risks accumulate and reinforce the subjective-health assessment. This suggests the economic cost-effectiveness of preventive obesity and smoking treatment and seems to be at odds with the 'Easterlin Paradox' that emphasizes within country individual effects and denies cross-country effects.
欧洲老年人口中的健康风险因素:个人和国家影响
现在普遍使用个人的自我评估健康状况(SAHS)作为健康的衡量标准。使用SAHS得到了大量研究的支持,这些研究表明SAHS比医疗记录更能预测死亡率和发病率。2011年欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查浪潮(SHARE)用于探索16个欧洲国家健康状况背后的各种因素,重点关注个人和国家层面的行为风险因素(吸烟、饮酒和肥胖)。主要发现是:(i) SAHS回归提供了明确的证据,表明三种行为风险因素对个人SAHS的显著影响,超出了健康状况和社会经济个人变量的影响;(ii)第二个更具创新性的发现与国家特定风险因素(国家层面的吸烟、肥胖和饮酒测量)对居民主观健康的影响有关,控制了个人特征。采用Oswald和Wu(2010)提出的技术,从SAHS回归中得出的国家效应与一组客观的国家宏观措施的相关性进行了检验。它们包括:每日/定期吸烟者的比例;酒精消费量(每年人均升数);全国肥胖人口的比例。国家层面的吸烟和肥胖似乎对国家总体SAHS产生负面影响,而饮酒则没有影响。因此,不仅“你是谁”会影响对健康的主观评价,而且“你生活在哪个国家”也会影响:个人和国家层面的风险因素都会影响主观健康,两种水平的行为风险会累积并加强主观健康评估。这表明预防性肥胖和吸烟治疗的经济成本效益,似乎与“伊斯特林悖论”不一致,伊斯特林悖论强调国家内部的个人影响,否认跨国影响。
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