scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

I feel good! Gender differences and reporting heterogeneity in self-assessed health

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the reporting behavior of individuals on their self-assessed health status, a five-point categorical variable, was analyzed and observed heterogeneity in categorical variables and include unob-served individual heterogeneity using German panel data.
Abstract
For empirical analysis and policy-oriented recommendation, the precise measurement of individual health or well-being is essential. The problem with variables based on questionnaires such as self-assessed health is that the answer may depend on individual reporting behaviour. Moreover, if individual‟s health perception varies with certain attitudes of the respondent reporting heterogenei-ty may lead to index or cut-point shifts of the health distribution, causing estimation problems. We analyse the reporting behaviour of individuals on their self-assessed health status, a five-point categorical variable. We explore observed heterogeneity in categorical variables and include unob-served individual heterogeneity using German panel data. Estimation results show different im-pacts of socioeconomic and health related variables on the five subscales of self-assessed health. Moreover, the answering behaviour varies between female and male respondents, pointing to gen-der specific perception and assessment of diseases. Reporting behaviour on self-assessed health questions in surveys is problematic due to a possible heterogeneity. Hence, in case of reporting heterogeneity, using self-assessed measures in empirical studies may be misleading or at least ambiguous.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding and interpreting generalized ordered logit models

TL;DR: The authors used both hypothetical examples and data from the 2012 European Social Survey to address the shortcomings of the ordered logit model and showed that Gologit/ppo models can be less restrictive than proportional odds models and more parsimonious than methods that ignore the ordering of categories altogether.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender and the structure of self-rated health across the adult life span.

TL;DR: Whether men and women differ in how health inputs predict their health rating across the adult life span is examined to strengthen the validity of SRH in measuring gender differences in health.
Posted Content

A 'Healthy Immigrant Effect' or a 'Sick Immigrant Effect'? Selection and Policies Matter

TL;DR: This article examines the health trajectories of immigrants within the context of selection and migration policies in Israel and 16 European countries that have fundamentally different migration policies, finding evidence that immigrants who move to Israel have compromised health and are significantly less healthy than comparable natives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mister Sandman, bring me good marks! On the relationship between sleep quality and academic achievement

TL;DR: Instrumenting PSQI scores by sleep quality during secondary education, it is found that increasing total sleep quality with one standard deviation leads to 4.85 percentage point higher course marks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reporting biases in self-assessed physical and cognitive health status of older Europeans.

TL;DR: The results suggest that comparisons of self-reported health between countries and age groups are prone to significant biases, whereas comparisons between genders are credible for most European countries.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Analysis With Missing Data

TL;DR: Generalized Estimating Equations is a good introductory book for analyzing continuous and discrete correlated data using GEE methods and provides good guidance for analyzing correlated data in biomedical studies and survey studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regression Models for Categorical and Limited Dependent Variables

James A. Calvin
- 01 Feb 1998 - 
TL;DR: Introduction Continuous Outcomes Binary Outcomes Testing and Fit Ordinal Outcomes Nominal outcomes Limited Outcomes Count Outcomes Conclusions
Journal ArticleDOI

Generalized ordered logit/partial proportional odds models for ordinal dependent variables

TL;DR: Gologit2 as discussed by the authors is a generalized ordered logit model inspired by Vincent Fu's gologit routine (Stata Technical Bulletin Reprints 8: 160-164).
Posted Content

Enhancing the Validity and Cross-Cultural Comparability of Measurement in Survey Research

TL;DR: This paper measured response category incomparability via respondents' assessments, on the same scale as the self-assessments to be corrected, of hypothetical individuals described in short vignettes.
Related Papers (5)