Journal article

The relationship between income and health using longitudinal data from New Zealand

FI Gunasekara, KN Carter, I Liu, K Richardson, T Blakely

Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2012

Abstract

Background Evidence for a cross-sectional relationship between income and health is strong but is probably biased by substantial confounding. Longitudinal data with repeated income and health measures on the same individuals can be analysed to control completely for time-invariant confounding, giving a more accurate estimate of the impact of short-term changes in income on health. Methods 4 years of annual data (2002e2005) from the New Zealand longitudinal Survey of Family, Income and Employment were used to investigate the relationship between annual household income and self-rated health (SRH) using a fixed-effects ordinal logistic regression model. Possible effect modification of the inco..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

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Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the Health Research Council of New Zealand and was completed as part of a PhD thesis within the Health Inequalities Research Programme, University of Otago. Publication was supported by the University of Otago Research Committee, by means of the University of Otago Postgraduate Publishing Bursary.