Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health

This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general how would you rate your health? with typical response items being on a scale ranging from poor to excellent. Usually, the overwhelming majority of responses fall in either the middle category or the on...

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Main Authors: Greene, W., Harris, Mark N., Hollingsworth, B.
Format: Journal Article
Published: M I T Press 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21657
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author Greene, W.
Harris, Mark N.
Hollingsworth, B.
author_facet Greene, W.
Harris, Mark N.
Hollingsworth, B.
author_sort Greene, W.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general how would you rate your health? with typical response items being on a scale ranging from poor to excellent. Usually, the overwhelming majority of responses fall in either the middle category or the one immediately to the "right" of this (in the above example, good and very good). However, based on a wide range of other medical indicators, such favourable responses appear to paint an overly rosy picture of true health. The hypothesis here is that these "middle" responses have been, in some sense, inflated. That is, for whatever reason, a significant number of responders inaccurately report into these categories. We find a significant amount of inflation into these categories. Adjusted responses to these questions could lead to significant changes in policy, and should be reflected upon when analysing and interpreting these scales.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-216572017-09-13T13:55:43Z Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health Greene, W. Harris, Mark N. Hollingsworth, B. This paper focuses on the self-reported responses given to survey questions of the form In general how would you rate your health? with typical response items being on a scale ranging from poor to excellent. Usually, the overwhelming majority of responses fall in either the middle category or the one immediately to the "right" of this (in the above example, good and very good). However, based on a wide range of other medical indicators, such favourable responses appear to paint an overly rosy picture of true health. The hypothesis here is that these "middle" responses have been, in some sense, inflated. That is, for whatever reason, a significant number of responders inaccurately report into these categories. We find a significant amount of inflation into these categories. Adjusted responses to these questions could lead to significant changes in policy, and should be reflected upon when analysing and interpreting these scales. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21657 10.1162/AJHE_a_00026 M I T Press fulltext
spellingShingle Greene, W.
Harris, Mark N.
Hollingsworth, B.
Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health
title Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health
title_full Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health
title_fullStr Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health
title_full_unstemmed Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health
title_short Inflated Responses in Measures of Self-Assessed Health
title_sort inflated responses in measures of self-assessed health
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21657