Showing posts with label methodology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label methodology. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Robustness in health research: Do differences in health measures, techniques, and time frame matter?

Robustness in health research: Do differences in health measures, techniques, and time frame matter?
Paul Frijters, Aydogan Ulker
Journal of Health Economics
Volume 27, Issue 6, December 2008, Pages 1626–1644

Abstract
Survey-based health research is in a boom phase following an increased amount of health spending in OECD countries and the interest in ageing. A general characteristic of survey-based health research is its diversity. Different studies are based on different health questions in different datasets; they use different statistical techniques; they differ in whether they approach health from an ordinal or cardinal perspective; and they differ in whether they measure short-term or long-term effects. The question in this paper is simple: do these differences matter for the findings? We investigate the effects of life-style choices (drinking, smoking, exercise) and income on six measures of health in the US Health and Retirement Study (HRS) between 1992 and 2002: (1) self-assessed general health status, (2) problems with undertaking daily tasks and chores, (3) mental health indicators, (4) BMI, (5) the presence of serious long-term health conditions, and (6) mortality. We compare ordinal models with cardinal models; we compare models with fixed effects to models without fixed-effects; and we compare short-term effects to long-term effects. We find considerable variation in the impact of different determinants on our chosen health outcome measures; we find that it matters whether ordinality or cardinality is assumed; we find substantial differences between estimates that account for fixed effects versus those that do not; and we find that short-run and long-run effects differ greatly. All this implies that health is an even more complicated notion than hitherto thought, defying generalizations from one measure to the others or one methodology to another.

JEL classification C23; C25; I31; Z1
Keywords Morbidity; Mortality; Lifestyle; Income

Ungated Version

Friday, March 18, 2011

Randomized Controlled Trials or Structural Models (or both... or neither...)?

This weekend the Centre for the Study of African Economies (CSAE) at Oxford hosts their 25th annual conference. The plenary sessions will be broadcast live at http://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/conferences/2011-EdiA/video.html

Sunday 20 March 2011 14: 30- 16:00 GMT Panel Debate: Research, African Economic Policy and the Role of Private Business

Monday 21 March 2011 8:30 -9:30 GMT Assessing the Millennium Villages Program

Monday 21 March 2011 9:30-10:30 GMT Keynote speech on 'Education as Liberation?' by leading US academic Michael Kremer

And of particular interest is the following session featuring: Tuesday 22 March 2011 16:30-18:30 GMT Panel Debate: Randomized Controlled Trials or Structural Models (or both... or neither...)?