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Inequalities in Health of Urban China - the Socioeconomic Correlations

Chen, Guang LU (2013) EKHR81 20131
Department of Economic History
Abstract
The thesis studies on the inequalities in health as an issue of the subject Health Economics. Inequalities in health is also known as a consequence of the inequalities in socioeconomic status and factors such as income, age, gender, education, employment status, place of residence, and etc. Due to the limitation on time and data, the thesis focuses on the urban individual statistics of China in the year 2002. The purpose of the study is to evaluate how and to what extent different factors had the impact on health in an individual perspective. One of the more surprising results is that income is found to be somehow quite unimportant to health. In comparison, employment status was rather decisive to health – the unemployed people had much... (More)
The thesis studies on the inequalities in health as an issue of the subject Health Economics. Inequalities in health is also known as a consequence of the inequalities in socioeconomic status and factors such as income, age, gender, education, employment status, place of residence, and etc. Due to the limitation on time and data, the thesis focuses on the urban individual statistics of China in the year 2002. The purpose of the study is to evaluate how and to what extent different factors had the impact on health in an individual perspective. One of the more surprising results is that income is found to be somehow quite unimportant to health. In comparison, employment status was rather decisive to health – the unemployed people had much poorer self-reported health than the employed, even the retired ones. Similarly, health was also significantly differed by the many places of residence. Gender difference was important as well, for females had worse self-reported health than males. Completed tertiary education could effectively improve heath, rather than the lower levels. Hopefully, the study can help to explain or insinuate the problems in the Chinese society and the health system, which can therefore support any future research works and social reforms. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Chen, Guang LU
supervisor
organization
course
EKHR81 20131
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
Inequalities in Health, Socioeconomics Status, Individual Health, Urban China
language
English
id
3811838
date added to LUP
2013-06-28 15:44:26
date last changed
2013-06-28 15:44:26
@misc{3811838,
  abstract     = {{The thesis studies on the inequalities in health as an issue of the subject Health Economics. Inequalities in health is also known as a consequence of the inequalities in socioeconomic status and factors such as income, age, gender, education, employment status, place of residence, and etc. Due to the limitation on time and data, the thesis focuses on the urban individual statistics of China in the year 2002. The purpose of the study is to evaluate how and to what extent different factors had the impact on health in an individual perspective. One of the more surprising results is that income is found to be somehow quite unimportant to health. In comparison, employment status was rather decisive to health – the unemployed people had much poorer self-reported health than the employed, even the retired ones. Similarly, health was also significantly differed by the many places of residence. Gender difference was important as well, for females had worse self-reported health than males. Completed tertiary education could effectively improve heath, rather than the lower levels. Hopefully, the study can help to explain or insinuate the problems in the Chinese society and the health system, which can therefore support any future research works and social reforms.}},
  author       = {{Chen, Guang}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Inequalities in Health of Urban China - the Socioeconomic Correlations}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}