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Title: Military Service, Combat Exposure, and Health in Retirement
Citation Type: Conference Paper
Publication Year: 2010
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Abstract: Military service has traditionally been the domain of healthy, robust males, but service can also reflect risk preference and socioeconomic status. Service also raisesthe probability of exposure to violence through combat, a significant stressor, and it may represent other types of treatments as well, both positive and negative. We mightexpect to find an ambiguous relationship between military service and later-life health, and several recent studies support this. In this paper, we explore the relationshipbetween combat exposure and health past age 50 in the Health and Retirement Study, a rich longitudinal panel including many male veterans that now asks about combatexposure in its core survey. Using regression analysis and an instrumental variables approach, we show that combat exposure harms mental health and emotional well-being and raises a biomarker of stress at older ages, but it appears often to have negligible effects on a wide array of physical health metrics.
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Authors: Edwards, Ryan D.; MacLean, Alair
Conference Name: Population Association of America
Publisher Location: Washington, D.C.
Data Collections: IPUMS USA
Topics: Health
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