Heterogeneous Effects of Volunteering on Frailty in Later Life: A Panel Quantile Regression Approach

Author:

Han Sae Hwang12ORCID,Park Narae3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Texas at Austin , Austin, Texas , USA

2. Population Research Center, University of Texas at Austin , Austin, Texas , USA

3. BK21 FOUR R&E Center for Economics, Department of Economics, Korea University , Seoul , South Korea

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Decades of research indicate that volunteering is associated with better health for the volunteer beyond the selection effects based on health. However, little is known about potential heterogeneity in health outcomes associated with volunteering in the context of good or poor health. This study addresses this gap by focusing on the frailty index (FI) to investigate the volunteering–health nexus across the population frailty distribution ranging from fit to frail. Methods Using nationally representative data from the Health and Retirement Study (person N = 34,986; 198,218 person-wave observations), we estimated unconditional quantile regression models with panel fixed effects to estimate changes in FI associated with changes in the share of volunteers in the population across the frailty distribution observed across the study period (1998–2020). Results Our findings demonstrated that the volunteering–FI association was heterogeneous across the frailty distribution. The association was the most potent at the higher end of the frailty distribution, suggesting that efforts to promote volunteering may yield greater benefits for older adults experiencing high levels of frailty. Discussion The current study findings provide unique and compelling evidence in support of earlier calls for considering volunteering as a public health intervention. The study findings are discussed in the context of population health outcomes and health disparities.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Ministry of Education of Korea

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference41 articles.

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2. Fixed effects in unconditional quantile regression;Borgen,2016

3. Volunteering and health in later life;Burr,2021

4. Productivity & engagement in an aging America: The role of volunteerism;Carr,2015

5. Does becoming a volunteer attenuate loneliness among recently widowed older adults;Carr,2018

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