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Poor Health Reporting: Do Poor South Africans Underestimate Their Health Needs?

Laura Rossouw

No wp-2015-027, WIDER Working Paper Series from World Institute for Development Economic Research (UNU-WIDER)

Abstract: Researchers often rely on household survey data to investigate health disparities and the incidence and prevalence of illness. These self-reported health measures are often biased due to information asymmetry or differences in reference groups. Using the World Health Organization study on global ageing and adult health, I find that the poor use a different reporting scale from the more affluent, leading to overestimation of their health status. This is tested by using the relatively novel anchoring vignettes approach and applying the hierarchical ordered probit model.

Keywords: Equality and inequality; Healthcare; Public health (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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