Does More Schooling Reduce Hospitalization and Delay Mortality? New Evidence Based on Danish Twins

Author:

Behrman Jere R.1,Kohler Hans-Peter2,Jensen Vibeke Myrup3,Pedersen Dorthe4,Petersen Inge4,Bingley Paul3,Christensen Kaare4

Affiliation:

1. Economics and Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, McNeil 160, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6297, USA

2. Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

3. Danish National Centre for Social Research, Copenhagen, Denmark

4. The Danish Twin Registry and The Danish Aging Research Center, University of Southern Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Schooling generally is positively associated with better health-related outcomes—for example, less hospitalization and later mortality—but these associations do not measure whether schooling causes better health-related outcomes. Schooling may in part be a proxy for unobserved endowments—including family background and genetics—that both are correlated with schooling and have direct causal effects on these outcomes. This study addresses the schooling-health-gradient issue with twins methodology, using rich data from the Danish Twin Registry linked to population-based registries to minimize random and systematic measurement error biases. We find strong, significantly negative associations between schooling and hospitalization and mortality, but generally no causal effects of schooling.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

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