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Marital Status, the Economic Benefits of Marriage, and Days of Inactivity due to Poor Health
Author(s) -
Jim P. Stimpson,
Fernando A. Wilson,
M. Kristen Peek
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of population research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-4029
pISSN - 2090-4037
DOI - 10.1155/2012/568785
Subject(s) - marital status , poverty , demography , multivariate analysis , socioeconomic status , multivariate statistics , household income , mental health , psychology , medicine , geography , economics , population , statistics , mathematics , archaeology , sociology , psychotherapist , economic growth
Purpose. This study explored whether the economic benefits of marriage mediate the association between marriage and health and if that relationship is conditional on the level of shared economic resources. Methods. Pooled, cross-sectional data from NHANES 2001–2006 were analyzed using multivariate zero-inflated negative binomial regression for the number of days of inactivity due to poor physical or mental health. Results. Persons that were divorced/separated reported the highest average number of days of inactivity (mean = 2.5) within a 30 day period, and married persons reported the lowest number of days of inactivity (mean = 1.4). Multivariate results indicated that widowed persons did not report significantly more days of inactivity than married persons. Income to poverty ratio reduced the size and eliminated statistical significance of the difference between divorced/separated and never married marital statuses compared to married persons. The interaction effect for marital status and income to poverty ratio was statistically significant suggesting that the relationship between marital status and inactivity is conditional on shared income. Conclusion. Marriage confers health protective benefits in part through pooled income relative to other marital statuses

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