The Increasing Predictive Validity of Self-Rated Health
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Abstract
Using the 1980 to 2002 General Social Survey, a repeated cross-sectional study that has been linked to the National Death Index through 2008, this study examines the changing relationship between self-rated health and mortality. Research has established that self-rated health has exceptional predictive validity with respect to mortality, but this validity may be deteriorating in light of the rapid medicalization of seemingly superficial conditions and increasingly high expectations for good health. Yet the current study shows the validity of self-rated health is increasing over time. Individuals are apparently better at assessing their health in 2002 than they were in 1980 and, for this reason, the…
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898
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2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Self-rated health
- Predictive validity
- National Death Index
- Psychology
- Medicine
- Cognition
- Occupational safety and health
- Gerontology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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