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Scientific article 11. APR 2018

Universal infant health interventions and young adult outcomes

Authors:

  • Miriam Wüst
  • Erik Lykke Mortensen
  • Merete Osler
  • Thorkild I.A. Sørensen
Download Hent den videnskabelige artikel
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Three recent studies have documented short- and long-run benefits of
early-infancy health interventions in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark: Universal
nurse home visiting (NHV) and well-baby center care decreased infant mortal-
ity and positively impacted long-run survival (DK, S), morbidity (DK, N), and
educational and labor market outcomes (N). Using Danish conscription data,
this paper examines intermediate outcomes to assess both potential mechanisms
and the importance of selective survival for the long-run health effects of NHV.
We do not find strong effects of NHV for young adult's height or obesity status,
but we find that NHV increases treated individuals' probability of emigration.
As emigrants in our sample are positively selected and as they are not part of
the samples used in long-run analyses, this finding suggests that the established
long-run health benefits of NHV may be lower bounds.

Authors

  • Miriam WüstErik Lykke MortensenMerete OslerThorkild I.A. Sørensen

About this publication

  • Published in

    Health Economics
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