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 Ingrid van Dijk . Photo

Ingrid van Dijk

Associate senior lecturer

 Ingrid van Dijk . Photo

Short Lives : The Impact of Parental Death on Early-Life Mortality and Height in the Netherlands, 1850-1940

Author

  • Björn Quanjer
  • Ingrid K. van Dijk
  • Matthias Rosenbaum-Feldbrügge

Summary, in English

We investigate how experiencing parental death in infancy, childhood, or adolescence affected individuals' health using two distinct measures: mortality before age 20 and young adult height. Using two complementary indicators of health enables us to gain more insights into processes of selection and the scarring of health. Employing nationally representative data for the Netherlands for the 1850-1940 period, we analyze the survival of roughly 36,000 boys and girls using Cox proportional hazard models, and the stature of more than 4,000 young adult men using linear regression models. Results show that losing a parent-particularly a mother-at an early age (0-1 or 1-5) was related to a strongly increased risk of mortality. We find no evidence that losing a parent at these ages affected stature in young adulthood. For boys, experiencing maternal death between ages five and 12 was strongly associated with a shorter young adult height; however, we did not find evidence for an association between experiencing paternal death and shorter stature. We conclude that stature may not be a particularly good measure of the effects of early-life adversity if the health shock greatly increases mortality, as these effects create potential issues of health selection.

Department/s

  • Centre for Economic Demography

Publishing year

2023-02-01

Language

English

Pages

255-279

Publication/Series

Demography

Volume

60

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Population Assn Amer

Topic

  • Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology

Keywords

  • Early-life conditions
  • Health outcomes
  • Height
  • Mortality
  • Parental death

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1533-7790