Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
December 15, 2017
Abstract:
We use self-reported health measures, nurse-administered measurements and blood-based biomarkers to examine the concordance between health states of partners in marital/cohabiting relationships in the UK. A model of cumulative health exposures is used to interpret the empirical pattern of between-partner health correlation in relation to elapsed relationship duration, allowing us to distinguish non-causal correlation due to assortative mating from potentially causal effects of shared lifestyle and environmental factors. We find important differences between the results for different health indicators, with strongest homogamy correlations observed for adiposity, followed by blood pressure, heart rate, inflammatory markers and cholesterol, and also self-assessed general health and functional difficulties. We find no evidence of a “dose-response relationship” for marriage duration, and show that this suggests – perhaps counterintuitively – that shared lifestyle factors and homogamous partner selection make roughly equal contributions to the concordance we observe in most of the health measures we examine.
Published in
Journal of Health Economics
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 56 , p.87 -102
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2017.09.010
ISSN
1676296
Subjects
Notes
Open Access
Open Access funded by Economic and Social Research Council
Under a Creative Commons license
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