Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) R.M. Hauser , Jeremy Freese , Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA, Kellogg School of Management Northwestern University
ANO 2011
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Journal of Health and Social Behavior
ISSN 0022-1465
E-ISSN 2150-6000
EDITORA JSTOR (United States)
DOI 10.1177/0022146510396713
CITAÇÕES 16
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 8fb1304932c16d99436b4fec889cd327

Resumo

This article addresses a potentially serious problem with the widely used self-rated health (SRH) survey item: that different groups have systematically different ways of using the item's response categories. Analyses based on unadjusted SRH may thus yield misleading results. The authors evaluate anchoring vignettes as a possible solution to this problem. Using vignettes specifically designed to calibrate the SRH item and data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS; N = 2,625), the authors show how demographic and health-related factors, including sex and education, predict differences in rating styles. Such differences, when not adjusted for statistically, may be sufficiently large to lead to mistakes in rank orderings of groups. In the present sample, unadjusted models show that women have better SRH than men, but this difference disappears in models adjusting for women's greater health-optimism. Anchoring vignettes appear a promising tool for improving intergroup comparability of SRH.

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