2020
DOI: 10.3386/w27974
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Socioeconomic Status and the Experience of Pain: An Example from Knees

Abstract: Reports of pain differ markedly across socioeconomic groups and are correlated with outcomes such as functional limitations and disability insurance receipt. This paper examines the differential experience of pain by education. We focus on knee pain, the most common musculoskeletal complaint. Comparing clinical interpretation of knee x-rays of people with and without pain, there are few differences in presence or clinical severity of arthritis across education groups. In contrast, less educated people report m… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Individuals invest in health capital though behaviors such as regular exercise and maintaining a proper diet. Health capital depreciates over time at a rate that increases with age and in response to factors such as poor health behaviors, stress, and physically demanding occupations (Cutler, Meara, and Stewart 2020). The health-capital framework suggests that various factors have long-lasting effects that "come home to roost" in midlife mortality data many decades on.…”
Section: A Portmanteau Of State-level Factors a Portmanteau Of State-level Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Individuals invest in health capital though behaviors such as regular exercise and maintaining a proper diet. Health capital depreciates over time at a rate that increases with age and in response to factors such as poor health behaviors, stress, and physically demanding occupations (Cutler, Meara, and Stewart 2020). The health-capital framework suggests that various factors have long-lasting effects that "come home to roost" in midlife mortality data many decades on.…”
Section: A Portmanteau Of State-level Factors a Portmanteau Of State-level Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chapter 9 provides a brilliant discussion of opioids, starting with the Opium war between China and Britain in the early 19 th century and extending through their current key contribution to recent increases in DSL mortality. Case and Deaton describe the different 5 A recent analysis by Cutler et al (2020) finds that knee pain (the most common musculoskeletal complaint) declines with education, with greater pain levels among the less educated largely explained by higher rates of obesity, more physically demanding jobs, and interactions between the two. 6 This is not quite correct.…”
Section: B Dsl Mortality: Detailsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…See Strulik (2021) for an introduction of pain and pain treatment into health economic theory. See Cutler et al (2020) on the differential experience of pain by socioeconomic status.…”
Section: The Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%