Zimmer Zachary, Martin Linda G, Ofstedal Mary Beth, Chuang Yi-Li
Institute of Public and International Affairs, University of Utah, 260 S. Central Campus Drive, Room 214, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Demography. 2007 May;44(2):289-305. doi: 10.1353/dem.2007.0020.
In societies in which families are highly integrated, the education of family members may be linked to survival. Such may be the case in Taiwan, where there are large gaps in levels of education across generations and high levels of resource transfers between family members. This study employs 14 years of longitudinal data from Taiwan to examine the combined effects of the education of older adults and their adult children on the mortality outcomes of older adults. We use nested Gompertz hazard models to evaluate the importance of the education of an older adult and his or her highest-educated child after controlling for socioeconomic, demographic, and health characteristics at baseline. To gain further insight, we fit additional models based on the sample stratified by whether older adults report serious diseases at baseline. The results indicate that the educational levels of both older adults and children are associated with older adult mortality, but children's education appears more important when we examine the mortality of only those older adults who already report a serious disease. This finding suggests that there may be different roles for education in the onset versus the progression of a health problem that may lead to death.
在家庭高度融合的社会中,家庭成员的教育可能与生存相关。台湾或许就是这种情况,那里代际之间的教育水平存在巨大差距,且家庭成员之间的资源转移水平很高。本研究采用来自台湾的14年纵向数据,以检验老年人及其成年子女的教育对老年人死亡率结果的综合影响。我们使用嵌套的冈珀茨风险模型,在控制基线时的社会经济、人口统计学和健康特征后,评估老年人及其受教育程度最高的子女的教育的重要性。为了获得更深入的见解,我们基于按老年人在基线时是否报告患有严重疾病分层的样本拟合了额外的模型。结果表明,老年人和子女的教育水平都与老年人死亡率相关,但当我们仅考察那些已经报告患有严重疾病的老年人的死亡率时,子女的教育似乎更为重要。这一发现表明,在可能导致死亡的健康问题的发病与进展过程中,教育可能发挥不同的作用。