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The Effects of Birth Weight on Hospitalizations and Sickness Absences

Helgertz, Jonas LU and Nilsson, Anton LU (2017) In Lund Papers in Economic History:
Abstract
This study examines the causal effects of birth weight on two health-related outcomes: inpatient hospitalizations and sickness absences, distinguishing between different diagnoses. Our analysis exploits differences within siblings and within twin pairs, using full population Swedish register data on cohorts born between 1973 and 1995, observed through childhood and in adulthood. In childhood, there is a strong relationship between birth weight and days in inpatient care. This is mostly driven by perinatal conditions during infancy, but substantial effects on other conditions are also found. Effects reduce in size when the child grows older. There are also significant and important effects in adulthood, and these are stronger than the ones... (More)
This study examines the causal effects of birth weight on two health-related outcomes: inpatient hospitalizations and sickness absences, distinguishing between different diagnoses. Our analysis exploits differences within siblings and within twin pairs, using full population Swedish register data on cohorts born between 1973 and 1995, observed through childhood and in adulthood. In childhood, there is a strong relationship between birth weight and days in inpatient care. This is mostly driven by perinatal conditions during infancy, but substantial effects on other conditions are also found. Effects reduce in size when the child grows older. There are also significant and important effects in adulthood, and these are stronger than the ones found in late childhood. In adulthood, the strongest and most consistent effects are obtained for mental conditions. This holds for both hospital visits and sickness absences, but is most striking for hospital visits, where mental diagnoses may account for almost the entire effect of a lower birth weight. Overall, we provide evidence that birth weight does matter for both short- and long-term health outcomes and that the effects may not be smaller than what more traditional OLS regressions suggest. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Working paper/Preprint
publication status
published
subject
keywords
birth weight, childhood health, adulthood health, fetal origins hypothesis, I1, I12
in
Lund Papers in Economic History:
issue
157
pages
24 pages
publisher
Department of Economic History, Lund University
ISSN
1101-346X
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
07af0c57-2f46-4235-902e-db6c4c916da4
date added to LUP
2017-03-15 08:57:55
date last changed
2019-04-12 14:20:19
@misc{07af0c57-2f46-4235-902e-db6c4c916da4,
  abstract     = {{This study examines the causal effects of birth weight on two health-related outcomes: inpatient hospitalizations and sickness absences, distinguishing between different diagnoses. Our analysis exploits differences within siblings and within twin pairs, using full population Swedish register data on cohorts born between 1973 and 1995, observed through childhood and in adulthood. In childhood, there is a strong relationship between birth weight and days in inpatient care. This is mostly driven by perinatal conditions during infancy, but substantial effects on other conditions are also found. Effects reduce in size when the child grows older. There are also significant and important effects in adulthood, and these are stronger than the ones found in late childhood. In adulthood, the strongest and most consistent effects are obtained for mental conditions. This holds for both hospital visits and sickness absences, but is most striking for hospital visits, where mental diagnoses may account for almost the entire effect of a lower birth weight. Overall, we provide evidence that birth weight does matter for both short- and long-term health outcomes and that the effects may not be smaller than what more traditional OLS regressions suggest.}},
  author       = {{Helgertz, Jonas and Nilsson, Anton}},
  issn         = {{1101-346X}},
  keywords     = {{birth weight; childhood health; adulthood health; fetal origins hypothesis; I1; I12}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Working Paper}},
  number       = {{157}},
  publisher    = {{Department of Economic History, Lund University}},
  series       = {{Lund Papers in Economic History:}},
  title        = {{The Effects of Birth Weight on Hospitalizations and Sickness Absences}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/22624545/LUP_157.pdf}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}