Do people gain weight after marriage? A paper by Jeffrey and Rick (2002) says yes. Using data collected from 2528 workers over a 2 year period, the authors estimated the effect of marriage and divorce on weight gain. They found the following:
Getting married increases BMI by 0.70 for men and 0.96 for women. For the average American male and female, this translates into a 4.8 pound increase for men and a 5.6 pound increase for women.
Getting divorced actually decreases BMI. The coefficients estimated were -0.27 for men and -0.63 for women; this translates into weight losses of 1.8 pounds for men and 3.7 pounds for women.
The authors also found that "spouses tend to become more similar in body weight over time, indicating that environmental influences are an important cause of spouse weight similarity."
- Jeffery RW, Rick AM. (2002) "Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between body mass index and marriage-related factors." Obesity Research 2002 Aug;10(8):809-815.
Source: Healthcare Economist
--
Jean-Louis Kayitenkore
Procurement Consultant
Gsm: (250) 08470205
Home: (250) 55104140
P.O. Box 3867
Kigali - RWANDA
East AFRICA
Blog: http://cepgl.blogspot.com
Skype ID: kayisa66
No comments:
Post a Comment