4.5 Article

Self-Rated Health and Morbidity Onset Among Late Midlife US Adults

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/geronb/gbs104

Keywords

Morbidity; Chronic disease; Self-rated health (SRH); The Health and Retirement Study

Funding

  1. NIA training grant from the University of Michigan [T32 AG000221]
  2. NICHD Center [R24 HD041028]

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Objectives. Although self-rated health (SRH) is recognized as a strong and consistent predictor of mortality and functional health decline, there are relatively few studies examining SRH as a predictor of morbidity. This study examines the capacity of SRH to predict the onset of chronic disease among the late midlife population (ages 51-61 years). Method. Utilizing the first 9 waves (1992-2008) of the Health and Retirement Study, event history analysis was used to estimate the effect of SRH on incidence of 6 major chronic diseases (coronary heart disease, diabetes, stroke, lung disease, arthritis, and cancer) among those who reported none of these conditions at baseline (N = 4,770). Results. SRH was a significant predictor of onset of any chronic condition and all specific chronic conditions excluding cancer. The effect was particularly pronounced for stroke. Discussion. This research provides the strongest and most comprehensive evidence to date of the relationship between SRH and incident morbidity.

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