2006
DOI: 10.1007/s11205-005-4097-7
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Body Mass Index, Perceived Health, and Happiness: Their Determinants and Structural Relationships

Abstract: ABSTRACT. The structural relationships between body mass index, perceived health and happiness have been studied in a survey of 700 native Dutch citizens. We found an indirect effect of body mass index on happiness, via perceived health. Age had an inverted U-shaped relationship with body mass index, and both education and smoking had a negative effect on body mass index. Being married, doing paid work, owning a house, and doing sports had positive effects on perceived health, suggesting that living a regular … Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…10 A large 10-point move up in BMI is associated in the cross-section with only a fairly small worsening, by around 0.3 points, in GHQ mental health. The negative sign in these equations is consistent with cross-sectional happiness evidence for the United States in Felton and Graham (2005), Switzerland in Stutzer (2006), and the Netherlands in Cornelisse-Vermaat et al (2006), and also with some of the longitudinal associations in Roberts et al (2000;.…”
Section: Some Evidencesupporting
confidence: 78%
“…10 A large 10-point move up in BMI is associated in the cross-section with only a fairly small worsening, by around 0.3 points, in GHQ mental health. The negative sign in these equations is consistent with cross-sectional happiness evidence for the United States in Felton and Graham (2005), Switzerland in Stutzer (2006), and the Netherlands in Cornelisse-Vermaat et al (2006), and also with some of the longitudinal associations in Roberts et al (2000;.…”
Section: Some Evidencesupporting
confidence: 78%
“…The average correlation between age and Lsat, CLAS and SWB was r = 0.10, with a high of r = 0.14 for CLAS and a low of r = 0.08 for Lsat and SWB. The Body Mass Index has often been found negatively correlated with a variety of health status measures, e.g., see Michalos et al (2005), and Cornelisse-Vermaat et al (2006). This is the first time it has been used in a study with our seven overall life assessment variables, and its uniformly negative association with six of the seven is an important finding.…”
Section: Bivariate Relationshipsmentioning
confidence: 62%
“…Here X is an n  K matrix of control variables (Frey and Stutzer, 2000;Cornlisse-Vermatt et al, 2006;Blanchflower, 2008), some of which are endogenous and thus EX 0 u 6 ¼ 0.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%