Rocco Lorenzo
Department of Economics, University of Padova, via del Santo, 33, Padova 35123, Italy.
Health Policy. 2014 May;116(1):123-32. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2014.01.011. Epub 2014 Jan 23.
Along the pathway traced by few recent contribution that attempt to identify the causal effect of social capital on health, this paper analyzes whether individual social capital reduces the probability of experiencing 11 long-lasting and chronic diseases. The empirical problems related to reverse causation and unobserved heterogeneity are addressed by means of a procedure that exploits the within-individual variation between the timings of first occurrence of the 11 diseases considered. Estimates indicate that the probability of occurrence is on average 14-18 percent lower among individuals reporting to "trust most of the other people". This result is robust to two alternative specifications as well as the inclusion or omission of individual controls.
沿着最近一些试图确定社会资本对健康因果效应的研究路径,本文分析了个体社会资本是否会降低患11种长期慢性病的概率。通过利用所考虑的11种疾病首次出现时间的个体内部差异的程序,解决了与反向因果关系和未观察到的异质性相关的实证问题。估计表明,在报告“信任大多数其他人”的个体中,发病概率平均低14%-18%。这一结果在两种替代设定以及纳入或省略个体控制变量的情况下都是稳健的。