Chronic conditions and child health: does income mediate?
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Chronic conditions and child health: does income mediate? |
---|---|
Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Khanam, Rasheda (Author), Nghiem, Hong Son (Author) and Connelly, Luke B. (Author) |
Editors | Pincus, Jonathan |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Proceedings of the 38th Australian Conference of Economists (ACE 2009) |
ERA Conference ID | 50287 |
Number of Pages | 15 |
Year | 2009 |
Place of Publication | Adelaide, Australia |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | https://editorialexpress.com/cgi-bin/conference/download.cgi?db_name=ACE09&paper_id=75 |
Conference/Event | 38th Australian Conference of Economists (ACE 2009) |
Australian Conference of Economists | |
Event Details | 38th Australian Conference of Economists (ACE 2009) Event Date 28 to end of 30 Sep 2009 Event Location Adelaide, Australia |
Event Details | Australian Conference of Economists ACE |
Abstract | Discussions of the income-child health gradient have often focused on the question of whether the association between household income and child health is attributable to children from low-income households experiencing more health shocks, responding less well to the health shocks they experience, or both. This question was originally posed by Currie and Stabile (2003), who produced evidence that children from lower-income households in Canada experienced more health shocks. However, few authors have been able to address these questions empirically, as suitable (panel) data have, until recently, been scarce. The current paper contributes to this small literature by producing new empirical evidence for Australia, using the Longitudinal Study of Australian (LSAC) to examine the question of how the income-child health gradient may be explained. The central results are that we find no evidence that children from low-income households are subject to more frequent health shocks (as measured by chronic conditions), and nor do we find that children from low-income households register any worse recovery from a health shock once it has occurred. Our findings are in contrast to those for the United States, as reported by Murasko (2008) and Condliffe and Link (2008). We speculate that the extensive and universal public healthcare system in Australia may offset some of the important health-related disadvantages that are associated with low incomes in other countries. |
Keywords | child health; income gradient; chronic condition; panel data; Australia |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 380108. Health economics |
380204. Panel data analysis | |
380201. Cross-sectional analysis | |
Public Notes | File reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher/author. |
Byline Affiliations | School of Accounting, Economics and Finance |
University of Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/9z377/chronic-conditions-and-child-health-does-income-mediate
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