Authors
Anne Case, Angus Deaton, Arthur A Stone
Publication date
2020/10/6
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
117
Issue
40
Pages
24785-24789
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
There is an expectation that, on average, pain will increase with age, through accumulated injury, physical wear and tear, and an increasing burden of disease. Consistent with that expectation, pain rises with age into old age in other wealthy countries. However, in America today, the elderly report less pain than those in midlife. This is the mystery of American pain. Using multiple datasets and definitions of pain, we show today’s midlife Americans have had more pain throughout adulthood than did today’s elderly. Disaggregating the cross-section of ages by year of birth and completion of a bachelor’s degree, we find, for those with less education, that each successive birth cohort has a higher prevalence of pain at each age—a result not found for those with a bachelor’s degree. Thus, the gap in pain between the more and less educated has widened in each successive birth cohort. The increase seen across birth …
Total citations
2020202120222023202442026219
Scholar articles
A Case, A Deaton, AA Stone - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020