The Relationship Between Subjective Well-Being and Self-Reported Health: Evidence from Ecuador.
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Springer
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Abstract
This article addresses the relationship between self-reported health and subjective well
being in two dimensions: cognitive and emotional. Using the Household Living
Conditions Survey 2014, this study represents the first approach for Ecuador and Latin
America to test how the two dimensions of subjective well-being explain self-reported
health. The cognitive dimension is measured by a happiness question in a life
evaluative mode. Whereas the emotional dimension is proxied by an average of 16
psychosocial well-being questions that indicates how many, from the last 7 days, the
person had a poor emotional state. We use descriptive statistics and a probit model with
an instrumental variable approach to address the omitted variables bias and reverse
causality. After controlling for socioeconomic, personal, regional, and health related
variables, the results indicate that happiness or the cognitive dimension of well-being is
the main predictor of self-reported health, quantitatively more important than having a
recent illness (objective health measure), habits (sport) or health care (health impor
tance). Furthermore, more days in a negative emotional state is associated with worse
self-reported health.
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https://openpolicyfinder.jisc.ac.uk/id/publication/11771
Bibliographic citation
Acosta-González, H.N., Marcenaro-Gutiérrez, O.D. The Relationship Between Subjective Well-Being and Self-Reported Health: Evidence from Ecuador. Applied Research Quality Life 16, 1961–1981 (2021)









