Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State

<p>This article is devoted to such an issue as the changing socio-economic inequalities in health that come with age. According to one theoretical explanation, these inequalities increase when people get older: in the lower strata, the negative effects of life’s hardships on health accumulate,...

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Main Authors: Nina L. Rusinova, Viacheslav V. Safronov
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Russian Academy of Sciences, Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology 2021-03-01
Series:Социологический журнал
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jour.fnisc.ru/index.php/socjour/article/view/7846/7743
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spelling doaj-5cb51f24bfb84f958c6f5d36601ab39a2021-04-15T19:35:02ZrusRussian Academy of Sciences, Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied SociologyСоциологический журнал1562-24952021-03-012719712110.19181/socjour.2021.27.1.78467846Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social StateNina L. Rusinova0Viacheslav V. Safronov1Russian FederationRussian Federation<p>This article is devoted to such an issue as the changing socio-economic inequalities in health that come with age. According to one theoretical explanation, these inequalities increase when people get older: in the lower strata, the negative effects of life’s hardships on health accumulate, and in the well-off ones, conversely, an accumulated positive effect occurs. This explanation is opposed by theories that predict a reduction in inequality. In older cohorts, as one of them notes, inequalities decrease as the physiological mechanisms of aging begin to play an increasingly important role, reducing the importance of social factors. Selective mortality can also help equalize structural distinction — reducing the number of low-status individuals with poor health leads to social differences smoothening out. Proponents of another theory emphasize the importance of social policy — state support and protection, including special social security programs for the elderly, in helping to maintain the health of vulnerable groups. The empirical results contradict the hypotheses and do not provide convincing evidence for any of the assumptions. Two-level modeling with survey data from the European Social Survey (ESS 2012) for 27 countries and statistical data on these countries, as well as regression analysis carried out on arrays of two groups of countries — with low and high government expenditure on health – showed that, as the transition to older age cohorts occurs, there is a gradual expansion of status inequalities, especially noticeable in countries with low budget spending on health. In the most developed social democracies, this trend did not persist — a slight increase in inequality continues until pre-retirement age, and then — in the category of older people — they smoothen out. The findings support arguments about the positive role of the social state in improving national health and reducing health inequalities after retirement.</p>https://www.jour.fnisc.ru/index.php/socjour/article/view/7846/7743self-rated healthlimitations in daily activity due to illnesssubjective social statusstatus inequalities in healthage moderationcomparative analysiseuropean social surveygovernment expenditure on healthtwo-level modeling
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina L. Rusinova
Viacheslav V. Safronov
spellingShingle Nina L. Rusinova
Viacheslav V. Safronov
Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State
Социологический журнал
self-rated health
limitations in daily activity due to illness
subjective social status
status inequalities in health
age moderation
comparative analysis
european social survey
government expenditure on health
two-level modeling
author_facet Nina L. Rusinova
Viacheslav V. Safronov
author_sort Nina L. Rusinova
title Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State
title_short Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State
title_full Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State
title_fullStr Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State
title_full_unstemmed Age Differences of SES Inequalities in Health: The Role of Social State
title_sort age differences of ses inequalities in health: the role of social state
publisher Russian Academy of Sciences, Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
series Социологический журнал
issn 1562-2495
publishDate 2021-03-01
description <p>This article is devoted to such an issue as the changing socio-economic inequalities in health that come with age. According to one theoretical explanation, these inequalities increase when people get older: in the lower strata, the negative effects of life’s hardships on health accumulate, and in the well-off ones, conversely, an accumulated positive effect occurs. This explanation is opposed by theories that predict a reduction in inequality. In older cohorts, as one of them notes, inequalities decrease as the physiological mechanisms of aging begin to play an increasingly important role, reducing the importance of social factors. Selective mortality can also help equalize structural distinction — reducing the number of low-status individuals with poor health leads to social differences smoothening out. Proponents of another theory emphasize the importance of social policy — state support and protection, including special social security programs for the elderly, in helping to maintain the health of vulnerable groups. The empirical results contradict the hypotheses and do not provide convincing evidence for any of the assumptions. Two-level modeling with survey data from the European Social Survey (ESS 2012) for 27 countries and statistical data on these countries, as well as regression analysis carried out on arrays of two groups of countries — with low and high government expenditure on health – showed that, as the transition to older age cohorts occurs, there is a gradual expansion of status inequalities, especially noticeable in countries with low budget spending on health. In the most developed social democracies, this trend did not persist — a slight increase in inequality continues until pre-retirement age, and then — in the category of older people — they smoothen out. The findings support arguments about the positive role of the social state in improving national health and reducing health inequalities after retirement.</p>
topic self-rated health
limitations in daily activity due to illness
subjective social status
status inequalities in health
age moderation
comparative analysis
european social survey
government expenditure on health
two-level modeling
url https://www.jour.fnisc.ru/index.php/socjour/article/view/7846/7743
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