Transgenerational Health Effects of In Utero Exposure to Economic Hardship: Evidence from Preindustrial Southern Norway
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23671Dato
2021-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
We studied whether in utero exposure to economic hardship during a grandmother's pregnancy has a transgenerational effect on her grandchildren's health condition. We used an individual-level three-generation data set covering people born between 1734 and 1840 in the municipality of Rendalen in Norway. We found a culling effect in which grandchildren whose grandmothers gave birth in years of economic hardship lived approximately ten years longer than grandchildren whose mothers were born in years of economic well-being. This impact was only observed among the grandmothers who belong to the lowest social classes. Our results also showed that in higher social classes, economic hardship during a grandmother's pregnancy deteriorated her grandchildren's health by "scarring" the mother's health.
Er en del av
Sari, E. (2023). Grandparents Matter – Multigenerational transmission of health and health behaviors. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31578Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Sari E, Moilanen M, Sommerseth HL. Transgenerational Health Effects of In Utero Exposure to Economic Hardship: Evidence from Preindustrial Southern Norway. Economics and Human Biology. 2020Metadata
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