Volume 19 - Article 43 | Pages 1575–1586
Human Biodemography: Some challenges and possibilities
Abstract
This opinion report - in a series on the future of biodemography - focuses on promising areas that I think will be valuable to develop in the future in order to get a better understanding of the determinants of the health and well-being of elderly people.
I discuss two major themes: i) the benefits of strengthening the ties between biodemography and medical-clinical disciplines to better understand the link between functioning/diseases/ vulnerability and mortality, ii) the male-female health-survival paradox (i.e., males report better health than females, but encounter higher mortality at all ages), and how this paradox may shed light on fundamental aging processes.
Author's Affiliation
- Kaare Christensen - Syddansk Universitet, Denmark EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Is the age difference between partners related to women's earnings?
Volume 41 - Article 15
The Fertility Pattern of Twins and the General Population Compared: Evidence from Danish Cohorts 1945-64
Volume 6 - Article 14
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
The influence of parental cancer on the mental health of children and young adults: Evidence from Norwegian register data on healthcare consultations
Volume 50 - Article 27
| Keywords:
cancer,
children,
fixed effects,
longitudinal,
mental health,
parents registers
Differences in mortality before retirement: The role of living arrangements and marital status in Denmark
Volume 50 - Article 20
| Keywords:
inequalities,
living arrangements,
marital status,
mortality,
retirement
Racial classification as a multistate process
Volume 50 - Article 17
| Keywords:
Brazil,
demography,
increments to life,
life expectancy,
life table,
mortality,
multistate,
race/ethnicity
Ageing and diversity: Inequalities in longevity and health in low-mortality countries
Volume 50 - Article 12
| Keywords:
aging,
health,
lifespan inequality,
longevity,
old-age threshold,
regional differences,
socioeconomic status
Measuring short-term mobility patterns in North America using Facebook advertising data, with an application to adjusting COVID-19 mortality rates
Volume 50 - Article 10
| Keywords:
COVID-19,
data collection,
Facebook,
mortality,
North America,
short-term mobility
Cited References: 37
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar