Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
February 15, 2013
Summary:
Objectives
Social scientists and economists doubt the usefulness of self-reported health status as an indicator of overall health status. Self-reported health acts as a justification for retirement when this decision is in reality driven by other reasons. In this study, we looked at income, job satisfaction, and job status.
Methods
We introduce a survival model (Cox model) that simultaneously includes both health and job characteristics as independent variables. We also take the age-dependent character of these effects into account.
Results
An analysis of the European Community Household Panel data did not validate the justification bias with respect to these variables. The addition of job characteristics had no influence on the effect estimates of self-reported health.
Conclusions
We found significant effects for self-reported health as well as for objective health measures. The addition of job characteristics did not contribute to the explanation of the effect of self-reported health falsifying the justification bias hypothesis.
Published in
International Journal of Public Health
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 58 , p.13 -22
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00038-012-0411-8
ISSN
16618556
Subject
Notes
Open Access article
#522053