|
Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
 | |
|
Education, cumulative advantage, and health | Author(s) | John Mirowsky, Catherine E Ross |
Journal title | Ageing International, vol 30, no 1, Winter 2005 |
Pages | pp 27-62 |
Source | http://www.transactionpub.com |
Keywords | Educational status [elderly] ; Economic status [elderly] ; Health [elderly] ; United States of America. |
Annotation | Education's positive effect on health increases as people age. The large socioeconomic differences in health among older Americans mostly accrue earlier in adulthood on gradients set by educational attainment. Education develops abilities that help individuals gain control of their own lives, encouraging and enabling a healthy life. The health-related consequences of education cumulate on many levels, from the socioeconomic (including work and income) and behavioural (including health behaviours such as exercising) to the physiological and intracellular. Some accumulations influence each other. In particular, a low sense of control over one's own life accelerates physical impairment, which in turn decreases the sense of control. That feedback progressively concentrates good physical functioning and a firm sense of personal control together in the better educated, while concentrating physical impairment and a sense of powerlessness together in the less well-educated, creating larger differences in health in old age. (RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-051010209 A |
Classmark | F:V: F:W: CC: 7T |
Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing |
|
...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing. |
| |
|