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Do socioeconomic effects on health diminish with age? A Singapore case study

journal contribution
posted on 2007-09-01, 00:00 authored by Santosh JatranaSantosh Jatrana, Angelique Chan
This paper examines the effects of socioeconomic characteristics on older adult health and investigates whether these socioeconomic effects carry through from the young-old to the oldest-old ages among Singaporean adults. Previous research shows little consensus over whether the impact of socioeconomic factors on health diminish with age. The variation in these results may be due to different definitions of socio-economic status, or the use of different health indicators. We use a comprehensive set of socioeconomic indicators (income, education level, homeownership, asset possession, and perceived income adequacy) to predict three health outcomes; poor self-assessed health, the presence of chronic illness, and functional disability. We find that while socioeconomic differentials in health status exist, the associations are not as consistent, nor as strong, as those reported for Western settings. Health inequalities related with socioeconomic status decline slightly but do not disappear with old age in Singapore.

History

Journal

Journal of cross-cultural gerontology

Volume

22

Pagination

287-301

Location

Cham, Switzerland

ISSN

0169-3816

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Springer Science + Business Media

Issue

3

Publisher

Springer

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