Authors
Jenny Torssander, Heta Moustgaard, Riina Peltonen, Fanny Kilpi, Pekka Martikainen
Publication date
2018/4/1
Journal
SSM-Population Health
Volume
4
Pages
271-279
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Because people tend to marry social equals – and possibly also because partners affect each other’s health – the social position of one partner is associated with the other partner’s health and mortality. Although this link is fairly well established, the underlying mechanisms are not fully identified. Analyzing disease incidence and survival separately may help us to assess when in the course of the disease a partner’s resources are of most significance. This article addresses the importance of partner’s education, income, employment status, and health for incidence and survival in two major causes of death: cancer and cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Based on a sample of Finnish middle-aged and older couples (around 200,000 individuals) we show that a partner’s education is more often connected to incidence than to survival, in particular for CVD. Once ill, any direct effect of partner’s education seems to decline …
Total citations
20192020202120222023112
Scholar articles
J Torssander, H Moustgaard, R Peltonen, F Kilpi… - SSM-Population Health, 2018