Volume 24 - Article 23 | Pages 551–578  

Self-perceived health in Belarus: Evidence from the income and expenditures of households survey

By Pavel Grigoriev, Olga Grigorieva

Abstract

Based on data from five cross-sectional household surveys conducted during 1996-2007, this study provides initial results of an analysis of self-perceived health in Belarus. The findings suggest that there has been a compression of morbidity. Self-perceived health has been improving steadily for both sexes and at all ages. Despite this notable improvement, Belarus still remains far behind Western Europe in terms of healthy life expectancy. This disadvantage is mainly due to higher mortality among the working-age population, but health at older ages also plays an important role. Education appears to be the most important factor associated with self-rated health.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

The Contextual Database of the Generations and Gender Programme: Concept, content, and research examples
Volume 35 - Article 9

Similar articles in Demographic Research

The association between resilience and survival among Chinese elderly
Volume 23 - Article 5    | Keywords: China, healthy life expectancy, mortality risk, residence, survival

Trends in healthy life expectancy in Japan: 1986 - 2004
Volume 20 - Article 19    | Keywords: healthy life expectancy, Japan, life expectancy, self-reported health

A model for geographical variation in health and total life expectancy
Volume 14 - Article 9    | Keywords: disease burden, healthy life expectancy, life tables, proportionality assumption, spatial effects

Algorithm for decomposition of differences between aggregate demographic measures and its application to life expectancies, healthy life expectancies, parity-progression ratios and total fertility rates
Volume 7 - Article 14    | Keywords: healthy life expectancy, life expectancy, parity progression