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Does Labor Market Status Influence Self-Assessed Health?

Philip Jefferson and Frederic Pryor

International Advances in Economic Research, 2014, vol. 20, issue 1, 45-56

Abstract: This study examines whether individuals’ self-assessed health is related to their previous standing in the labor market and their self-assessed health at that time. We find that, once self-assessed health in the past is controlled for, none of the specified reasons behind individuals’ labor market status at that time, including the inability to find work, have a statistically significant adverse impact on current assessment of physical or mental health. We do find, however, that women obtaining a job in the past period will currently perceive that their physical health is improved, and that previously unemployed men with a job to return to in the current period also experienced perceptions of better health in the current period. We present evidence that these perceptions share a common factor with other health indicators such as sick days and quasi-objective measures of physical and mental health. Copyright International Atlantic Economic Society 2014

Keywords: Physical health; Mental health; Employment; Individual dynamics; State dependence; I11; I12; E24 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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DOI: 10.1007/s11294-013-9451-y

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