Title: Pr
1Equality of opportunity in health in Europe
The long term impact of social background and
parents longevity on health status
Florence JUSOT, Université Paris-Dauphine (LEGOS)
IRDES Sandy TUBEUF, Academic Unit of Health
Economics Leeds Institute of Health Sciences
(GB) Alain TRANNOY, EHESS-IDEP-GREQAM
Health, inequalities, risk and public policy
2008 September 26-27 University Paris-Descartes
2Aims
- To explore the impact of family background on
health status of adults - Family background
- Parents occupations
- Health status of parents as measured by their age
at death - (1) To assess intergenerational inequality of
opportunity in health in Europe - Inequality of opportunity in health the
distribution of health status of descendants
depends on the family background - (2) To contribute to the understanding of
determinants of health status in adulthood - (3) To compare intergenerational inequality of
opportunity between European countries
3Context
- Several studies suggest
- An influence of social background on health
status in adulthood (Barker 1996 Blane 1999
Case 2005 Hyde et al. 2006 Melchior et al.
2006a) through several mecanisms - Direct impact of childhood conditions on health
status in adulthood (Latency and accumulation
models) - Indirect impact of childhood conditions on health
status in adulthood through the determination of
life trajectories and in particular socioeconomic
status (Pathway model) - An influence of parents health status on
descendants health - Correlation between parents health status and
childs health status (Case et al. 2000
Llena-Nozal 2007 Ahlburg 1998) - Correlation between longevity accross generations
(Cournil Kirkwood 2001) - Impact of the parents relative longevity on
descendants health status in France(Devaux et
al. 2008)
4Inequality of opportunity in health
- Social background and parents' health represent
circumstances independent of individual
responsibility - The distribution of health in adulthood
conditional on these circumstances will describe
inequalities of opportunities in health
(Dworkin,1981 Roemer, 1998 Fleurbaey, 1994
Dias and Jones, 2007) - Three steps are used to analyse intergenerational
inequalities of opportunity in health due to
parental circumstances - non parametric approach
- parametric approach
- counterfactual analysis
5Data and descriptive statistics
6Data
- 2003 SHARE Survey of Health, Ageing and
Retirement in Europe - 11 countries concerned Austria, Belgium,
Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the
Netherland, Spain, Sweden, (Swizerland) - 24 000 individuals, 49 years old and more, whose
both parents are deceased and who answered both
to - self-assessed health Would you say your health
is very good, good, fair, bad, very
bad - education level
- own (last) job
- parents last job
- parents age at death
ISCO Classification
7Respondents health status distribution
8Parents health status distribution
9Non-parametric approach
10Non-parametric approach
- Analysis of equality of opportunity in health
- Comparisons of distributions of respondents
health in terms of stochastic dominance at first
order based on a conjunction of
Kolmogorov-Smirnov unilateral tests - We compare distributions of health status
according to - The longevity of each parent
- The social status of each parent
11Inequality of opportunities in health according
to the fathers health
Belgique
12Inequality of opportunities in health according
to the mothers health
13Inequality of opportunities in health according
to the parents health
- There are inequalities of opportunities in
health according to parents health in all the
European countries - The distribution of health of individuals born
of parents who are still alive dominates the
other two distributions of health - The distribution of health of individuals born
of a father who died in older ages dominates the
distribution of health of individuals born of a
father who had died prematurely in Austria,
Germany, Sweden, Netherland and France - The distribution of health of individuals born
of a mother who died in older ages dominates the
distribution of health of individuals born of a
mother who had died prematurely in Austria, Italy
and Belgium - There is no control for age so younger
descendants are more likely to have alive parents
14Health status in adulthood according to the
fathers social status
Différences significatives
15Health status in adulthood according to the
mothers social status
16Inequality of opportunities in health status
according to social background
- There are inequalities of opportunity in health
according to social background in Europe - according to the fathers social status
- The distribution of health of sons of Senior
managers and professionals, Technicians and
associate professionals and armed forces
significantly dominates the distribution of
health of sons of Skilled agricultural and
fishery workers, Craftsmen and skilled
workers, Elementary occupations and unskilled
workers in Austria, Germany, Sweden, France,
Denmark and Belgium - according to the mothers social status
- The distribution of health of sons of Senior
managers. professionals and technicians, Office
clerks and service workers significantly
dominates the distribution of health of sons of
Skilled agricultural and fishery workers,
skilled and unskilled workers, Elementary
occupations and Homemakers in Austria,
Germany, Sweden, Spain, France, Denmark and
Belgium - Individuals born to a Homemaker mother
significantly report a better health than
individuals born to a mother Elementary
occupations and unskilled workers in Germany,
France and Belgium
17Inequality of opportunities in health status
according to social background
- A peculiar result for sons of Skilled
agricultural and fishery workers - They significantly have a better health status
than sons of Craftsmen and skilled workers,
Elementary occupations and unskilled workers
and even Office clerks and service workers and
shop and market sales workers in Netherland,
Denmark and Belgium - They significantly have a worse health status
than sons of Craftsmen and skilled workers,
Elementary occupations and unskilled workers in
Spain and Greece - The distribution of health of individuals born
to a mother who was Skilled agricultural and
fishery workers dominates all the other
distributions in Netherland - - The distribution of health of individuals born
to a mother who was Skilled agricultural and
fishery workers is dominated by all the other
distributions in Spain and Germany
18Parametric approach
19Parametric approach
- Analysis of intergenerational inequalities of
opportunities in health in terms of conditional
expectation controlled by age and sex - Logistic regression models
- Explaining the probability of being in good or
very good health status - Regressors
- Age/Sex
- Parents longevity
- Parents SES
- Descendants SES
- Descendants education level
- The two last variables control variables
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21Parametric approach
- Inequalities of opportunity according to the
fathers SES - in every countries except Netherland
- high in Germany, Austria, Belgium, Spain, France
and Italy - heterogeneity of the most advantaged social
backgrounds - Influence of social background more or less
direct from one country to the other - social reproduction Denmark, France, Greece and
Sweden - direct effect Germany, Austria, Belgium, Spain
and Italy - Inequalities of opportunity according to the
mothers SES - favoring agricultural workers Greece,
Netherland - disadvantaging agricultural workers Germany,
Belgium, Italie - favoring office clerks France
- favoring senior managers Sweden
- Inequalities of opportunity according to parents
longevity in every countries
22A first pass to the measurement of inequalities
of opportunities in health counterfactual
analysis
23Counterfactual analysis
- Inequalities of opportunity in health are health
inequalities explained by circumstances and not
by effort - We aim a measurement which takes into account the
health differences due to the direct effect of
circumstances on health and their indirect effect
going through the descendants education and
social status - If we assume that the respondent's SES
(educationsocial status) is the result of both
circumstances and his effort, then the
measurement should not take into account health
differences explained by the share of education
and social status due to individual effort - We aim a measurement independent from health
differences coming from demographic
characteristics (age and sex), considered as
legitimate differences
24Counterfactual analysis
- Measure based on the conditionnal probabilities
of being in good health status - Counterfactual analysis Comparison of the
probability of being in good health status
conditionnal to - - the current characteristics of the individuals
- - for given circumstances
- Measure closed to the fairness gap (Fleurbaey
and Schokkaert, 2008) - To measure the counterfactual probabilities, we
have to assess the full impact (direct
indirect) of circumstances
25Counterfactual analysis
- Separated estimation of the impact of social
background and parents' health on the
descendants education and the respondents
occupation (Probit models) - Educ a1 b1xAge c1xSex d1xCirc u1
- SES a2 b2xAge c2xSex d2xCirc
e2xEduc u2 - The generalized residuals E(u1/Xi) and E(u2/Xi)
(Gourieroux et al., 1985) can be interpreted as
effort, unobserved circumstances and luck
for a given background. - Assessment of the full influence of social
background and parents' health on the
respondents health status (Logit model) - Health a3 b3xAge c3xSex
d3xCircumstances - e3x E(u1/Xi) f3x E(u2/Xi) u3
26Counterfactual Analysis
- The last model is used to predict the probability
of being in good health status with - - currents circumstances (current probabilities)
- - best circumstances (counterfactual
probabilities) - The Gini index of predicted probabilities gives a
measure of health inequalities - The difference between the Gini index of the
current probabilities and the Gini index of the
counterfactual probabilities gives a measure of
the contribution of inequalities of opportunities
to health inequalities
27Health inequalities in Europe
28Contribution of inequalities of opportunity to
health inequalities in Europe
29Contribution of inequalities of opportunity
according to social background to health
inequalities in Europe
30Contribution of inequalities of opportunity
according to parents longevity to health
inequalities in Europe
31Contribution of inequalities of opportunity
according to the fathers characterisitics to
health inequalities in Europe
32Contribution of inequalities of opportunity
according to the mothers characteristics to
health inequalities in Europe
33Inequalities of opportunities in health, Income
and income inequalities European comparisons
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38Conclusion
39Conclusion
- Inequalities of opportunities in health in Europe
according to - social backgroud ()
- parents longevity
- Health status in adulthood is influenced by
- current social conditions
- social background indirect (pathway model) and
direct influence (childhood conditions, parents
education) - parents longevity genetic inheritance ?
health preferences and health-related behaviors
(prevention, risk) ? common characteristics
influencing health status of parents and children
? - Differences between European countries have to be
explained - policies reducing social reproduction
- policies reducing intergenerational reproduction
of health problems
40Conclusion
- Questions ?
- Some social statuses containing individuals who
are socially different from one country to the
other agricultural workers - Is self-assessed health usable for international
comparisons? - Selection biais of the sample (49 years old and
more)
41Thanks
Florence JUSOT, florence.jusot_at_dauphine.fr Sandy
TUBEUF, S.Tubeuf_at_leeds.ac.uk Alain TRANNOY,
Alain.Trannoy_at_eco.u-cergy.fr
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