Subjective health in adolescence: Comparing the reliability of contemporaneous, retrospective, and proxy reports of overall health

Citation

Bollen, Kenneth A.; Gutin, Iliya; Halpern, Carolyn T.; & Harris, Kathleen M. (2021). Subjective health in adolescence: Comparing the reliability of contemporaneous, retrospective, and proxy reports of overall health. Social Science Research. , PMCID: PMC8056067

Abstract

Self-rated health (SRH) is one of the most important social science measures of health. Yet its measurement properties remain poorly understood. Most studies ignore the measurement error in SRH despite the bias resulting from even random measurement error. Our goal is to estimate the measurement reliability of SRH in contemporaneous, retrospective, and proxy indicators. We use the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to estimate the reliability of SRH relative to proxy assessments and respondents’ recollections of past health. Even the best indicators – contemporaneous self-reports – have a modest reliability of ~0.6; retrospective and proxy assessments fare much worse, with reliability less than 0.2. Moreover, not correcting for measurement error in SRH leads to a ~20–40% reduction in its correlation with other measures of health. Researchers should be skeptical of analyses that treat these subjective reports as explanatory variables and fail to take account of their substantial measurement error.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2021.102538

Keyword(s)

Self-rated health

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Science Research

Author(s)

Bollen, Kenneth A.
Gutin, Iliya
Halpern, Carolyn T.
Harris, Kathleen M.

Year Published

2021

DOI

10.1016/j.ssresearch.2021.102538

PMCID

PMC8056067

NIHMSID

NIHMS1674196

Reference ID

5879