Marital status and mortality: The role of health

Prior literature has shown that married men live longer than unmarried men. Possible explanations are that marriage protects its incumbents or that healthier men select themselves into marriage. Protective effects, however, introduce the possibility of adverse selection: Those in poor health have an incentive to marry. In this paper we explore the role of health in explaining mortality and marriage patterns, and distinguish protective effects from two types of selection effects. We find adverse selection on the basis of health (unhealthy men tend to (re)marry sooner) and positive selection on the basis of unmeasured factors that both promote good health and encourage marriage.

[1]  T. G. Coleman,et al.  Numerical Integration , 2019, Numerical Methods for Engineering An introduction using MATLAB® and computational electromagnetics examples.

[2]  S. Hoffman A Treatise on the Family , 2000 .

[3]  Y. Weiss,et al.  Uncertain Health and Survival: Effects on End-of-Life Consumption , 1997 .

[4]  M. E. Hughes,et al.  Marriage protection and marriage selection--prospective evidence for reciprocal effects of marital status and health. , 1996, Social science & medicine.

[5]  Linda J. Waite,et al.  Premarital cohabitation and subsequent marital , 1995, Demography.

[6]  L. Waite,et al.  'Til Death Do Us Part: Marital Disruption and Mortality , 1995, American Journal of Sociology.

[7]  D. Kuh,et al.  Physical health status at 36 years in a British national birth cohort. , 1993, Social science & medicine.

[8]  O. Rahman,et al.  Excess mortality for the unmarried in rural Bangladesh. , 1993, International journal of epidemiology.

[9]  N. Goldman Marriage selection and mortality patterns: Inferences and fallacies , 1993, Demography.

[10]  L A Lillard,et al.  Simultaneous equations for hazards: marriage duration and fertility timing. , 1993, Journal of econometrics.

[11]  A. Mastekaasa Marriage and Psychological Well-Being: Some Evidence on Selection into Marriage. , 1992 .

[12]  Ken R. Smith,et al.  Marital transitions poverty and gender differences in mortality. , 1991 .

[13]  S. Kasl,et al.  Health perceptions and survival: do global evaluations of health status really predict mortality? , 1991, Journal of gerontology.

[14]  N. Goldman,et al.  Mortality Differentials by Marital Status: An International Comparison , 1990, Demography.

[15]  Dale T. Mortensen,et al.  Matching: Finding a Partner for Life or Otherwise , 1988, American Journal of Sociology.

[16]  D. Umberson,et al.  Family status and health behaviors: social control as a dimension of social integration. , 1987, Journal of health and social behavior.

[17]  J. Naylor,et al.  Applications of a Method for the Efficient Computation of Posterior Distributions , 1982 .

[18]  G. Becker,et al.  An Economic Analysis of Marital Instability , 1977, Journal of Political Economy.

[19]  L. Pearlin,et al.  Marital status, life-strains and depression. , 1977, American sociological review.

[20]  G. Hendershot,et al.  Do Family Ties Reduce Mortality? Evidence From the United States, 1966-1968. , 1977 .

[21]  Bronwyn H Hall,et al.  Estimation and Inference in Nonlinear Structural Models , 1974 .

[22]  W. Gove Sex, Marital Status, and Mortality , 1973, American Journal of Sociology.

[23]  P. C. Glick,et al.  Marriage and Divorce: A Social and Economic Study , 1972 .

[24]  M. Grossman On the Concept of Health Capital and the Demand for Health , 1972, Journal of Political Economy.

[25]  P. C. Glick,et al.  Marriage and divorce: a social and economic study , 1970 .

[26]  M. Yaari,et al.  Uncertain lifetime, life insurance, and the theory of the consumer , 1965 .

[27]  M. C. Sheps Marriage and Mortality. , 1961, American journal of public health and the nation's health.

[28]  L A Lillard,et al.  Premarital cohabitation and subsequent marital dissolution: a matter of self-selection? , 1995, Demography.

[29]  C. Panis,et al.  Health inputs and child mortality: Malaysia. , 1994, Journal of health economics.

[30]  N. Goldman,et al.  Are healthier people more likely to marry? An event history analysis based on the NLSY. , 1994 .

[31]  S. Preston,et al.  Socioeconomic differences in adult mortality and health status. , 1994 .

[32]  J. Strauss,et al.  Gender and Life-Cycle Differentials in the Patterns and Determinants of , 1993 .

[33]  J. Feinstein,et al.  The relationship between socioeconomic status and health: a review of the literature. , 1993, The Milbank quarterly.

[34]  M. Hurd Research on the Elderly: Economic Status, Retirement, and Consumption and Saving , 1990 .

[35]  S. Korenman,et al.  Health and mortality differentials by marital status at older ages: economics and gender. , 1990 .

[36]  G. Theodore Dangelmayer An Economic Analysis , 1990 .

[37]  Kisker Ee,et al.  Perils of single life and benefits of marriage. , 1987, Social biology.