TY - JOUR AU - Baker,Michael AU - Stabile,Mark AU - Deri,Catherine TI - What do Self-Reported, Objective, Measures of Health Measure? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 8419 PY - 2001 Y2 - August 2001 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8419 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8419.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Michael Baker Department of Economics University of Toronto 150 St. George Street Toronto, ON M5S 3G7 CANADA Tel: 416/978-4138 Fax: 416/978-6713 E-Mail: baker@chass.utoronto.ca Mark Stabile School of Public Policy and Governance University of Toronto 14 Queen's Park Cres. W. Toronto, ON M5S 3K9 CANADA Tel: 416/978-4329 Fax: 416/978-5079 E-Mail: mark.stabile@utoronto.ca AB - Survey reports of the incidence of chronic conditions are considered by many researchers to be more objective, and thus preferable, measures of unobserved health status than self-assessed measures of global well being. The former are 1) responses to specific questions about different ailments, which may constrain the likelihood that respondents rationalize their own behavior through their answers, and 2) more comparable across respondents. In this paper we evaluate this hypothesis by exploring measurement error in these 'objective, self-reported' measures of health. Our analysis makes use of a unique data set that matches a variety of self-reports of health with respondents' medical records. Our findings are striking. For example, the ratio of the error variance to the total variance ranges from just over 30 percent for the incidence of diabetes to over 80 percent for the incidence of arthritis. Furthermore, for many conditions the error is significantly related to individuals' labor market activity, as hypothesized in the literature. In the final section of the paper we compare estimates of the effect of these different measures of health on labor market activity. ER -