The impact of BMI on mental health: Further evidence from genetic markers

Citation

Amin, Vikesh; Flores, Carlos A.; & Flores-Lagunes, Alfonso (2020). The impact of BMI on mental health: Further evidence from genetic markers. Economics & Human Biology. vol. 38 , PMCID: PMC9062912

Abstract

We estimate the effect of BMI on mental health for young adults and elderly individuals using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health and the Health & Retirement Study. To tackle confounding due to unobserved factors, we exploit variation in a polygenic score (PGS) for BMI within two related econometric methods that differ in the assumptions they employ. First, we use the BMI PGS as an IV and adjust for PGSs for other factors (depression and educational attainment) that may invalidate this IV. We find a large statistically significant effect of BMI on mental health for the elderly: a 5 kg/m2 increase in BMI (a difference equivalent to moving from overweight to obese) increases the probability of depression by 29 %. In contrast, for young adults the IV estimates are statistically and economically insignificant. We show that IV estimates likely have to be interpreted as identifying a weighted average of effects of BMI on mental health mostly for compliers on the upper quantiles of the BMI distribution. Second, we use the BMI PGS as an “imperfect” IV and estimate an upper bound on the average treatment effect for the population. The estimated upper bounds are consistent with the conclusions from the IV estimates.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2020.100895

Keyword(s)

BMI

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Economics & Human Biology

Author(s)

Amin, Vikesh
Flores, Carlos A.
Flores-Lagunes, Alfonso

Year Published

2020

Volume Number

38

ISSN/ISBN

1570-677X

DOI

10.1016/j.ehb.2020.100895

PMCID

PMC9062912

Reference ID

6148