» Articles » PMID: 31231014

Does Adult Height Predict Later Mortality?: Comparative Evidence from the Early Indicators Samples in the United States

Overview
Journal Econ Hum Biol
Specialties Biology
Social Sciences
Date 2019 Jun 25
PMID 31231014
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In this paper, I supplement widely used demographic data on white veterans of the Union Army with large and newly collected data on blacks and urban white veterans to explore the question of whether adult height predicts late-life mortality at the individual level. The data are partitioned into four demographic groups based on individual characteristics at the time of enlistment: white veterans enlisting in rural areas, mid-size cities, and large cities, and African-American veterans of the U.S. Colored Troops (USCT). Across the three groups of white veterans, mean height is positively associated with life expectancy at age 60, while both mean height and life expectancy for black veterans are very close to levels measured among the highly urbanized white veterans. I examine whether these group-level differences are robust to individual-level analysis by estimating two types of models, separately for each group: 1) 10-year mortality at age 60 using a linear probability model with company-level fixed effects and 2) a Cox proportional hazard that tracks veterans from age 60 to death. For rural whites, I find a significant U-shaped relationship between height and 10-year mortality, with both the short and the tall at significantly higher risk of death. This pattern becomes more pronounced when excluding younger recruits (under aged 24) from the analysis. But this relationship does not extend to urban whites or to blacks, where no significant height effects are found, and in which the height-mortality relationship among the highest mortality groups (whites from the largest cities and blacks) appears to be a generally positive one. Overall, the robust positive relationship between height and life expectancy at the group level does not exist at the individual level.

Citing Articles

Long-run intergenerational health benefits of women empowerment: Evidence from suffrage movements in the US.

Noghanibehambari H, Noghani F Health Econ. 2023; 32(11):2583-2631.

PMID: 37482956 PMC: 10592160. DOI: 10.1002/hec.4744.

References
1.
Ihira H, Sawada N, Iwasaki M, Yamaji T, Goto A, Noda M . Adult height and all-cause and cause-specific mortality in the Japan Public Health Center-based Prospective Study (JPHC). PLoS One. 2018; 13(5):e0197164. PMC: 5951564. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197164. View

2.
Costa D . Health and the Economy in the United States, from 1750 to the Present. J Econ Lit. 2015; 53(3):503-570. PMC: 4577070. DOI: 10.1257/jel.53.3.503. View

3.
Sawada N, Wark P, Merritt M, Tsugane S, Ward H, Rinaldi S . The association between adult attained height and sitting height with mortality in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC). PLoS One. 2017; 12(3):e0173117. PMC: 5336260. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173117. View

4.
Rohrmann S, Haile S, Staub K, Bopp M, Faeh D . Body height and mortality - mortality follow-up of four Swiss surveys. Prev Med. 2017; 101:67-71. DOI: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.05.023. View

5.
Fryar C, Gu Q, Ogden C, Flegal K . Anthropometric Reference Data for Children and Adults: United States, 2011-2014. Vital Health Stat 3 Anal Stud. 2017; (39):1-46. View