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Schooling and Health: The Cigarette Connection

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TLDR
This paper found that the negative relation between schooling and smoking observed at age 24 is accounted for by differences in smoking behavior present at age 17, when all subjects were still in approximately the same grade.
Abstract
Numerous studies by economists during the past decade have revealed a large, statistically significant correlation between health and years of schooling after controlling for differences in income and other variables. Cigarette smoking is a likely intervening variable because of the strong effect of smoking on morbidity and mortality, and because there is a strong negative correlation between smoking and years of schooling -- at least at high school levels and above. This paper tests the hypothesis that schooling causes differences in smoking behavior. We use retrospective smoking histories of 1,183 white, non-Hispanic men and women who had completed 12 to 18 years of schooling. The data were collected in 1979 by the Stanford University Heart Disease Prevention Program from randomly selected households in four small California cities. The most striking result is that the negative relation between schooling and smoking observed at age 24 is accounted for by differences in smoking behavior present at age 17, when all subjects were still in approximately the same grade. We conclude that additional years of schooling cannot be the cause of differential smoking behavior; one or more "third variables" must cause changes in both smoking and schooling. Analysis of smoking by cohort reveals that the schooling-smoking correlation developed only after the health consequences of smoking became widely known; it has remained strong even in the most recent cohorts. This implies that the mechanism behind the schooling-smoking correlation may also give rise to the schooling-health correlation.

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Report by the commission on the measurement of economic performance and social progress

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Socioeconomic Disparities in Health Behaviors

TL;DR: Based on a review of broad literatures in sociology, economics, and public health, explanations of higher smoking, lower exercise, poorer diet, and excess weight among low-SES persons are classified into nine broad groups that specify related but conceptually distinct mechanisms.
Book ChapterDOI

The Human Capital Model

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed treatment of the human capital model of the demand for health which was originally developed in 1972 is discussed, and theoretical extensions of the model are reviewed, as well as empirical research that tests the predictions and studies causality between years of formal schooling completed and good health is surveyed.
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Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, and Schooling

TL;DR: Part of the relationship between schooling and the consumption of cigarettes, alcohol, and exercise is explained by differences in health knowledge, but most of schooling's effects on health behavior remain after differences in knowledge are controlled for.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validation of susceptibility as a predictor of which adolescents take up smoking in the United States.

TL;DR: Baseline susceptibility to smoking, defined as the absence of a firm decision not to smoke, was a stronger independent predictor of experimentation than the presence of smokers among either family or the best friend network, but exposure to smokers was not as important in distinguishing adolescents who progressed to established smoking from those who remained experimenters at follow-up.
References
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Posted Content

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An Economic Theory of Self-Control

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Smoking and health.

C. M. Fletcher, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
TL;DR: Evidence connecting smoking with disease smoking habits and total mortality diseases causing excess mortality of cigarette smokers cigarette smoking as a cause of excess mortality specific diseases related to cigarette smoking approaches to prevention and experience in the United States.
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