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The Link Between Education and Longevity
This activity shows how, for men and women alike and for people of all ethnic groups, more education often means longer, healthier lives.
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The Link Between Education and Longevity
As you already know, life expectancy—the number of years of life remaining at a given age—is a measure of the health of a population. In both men and women it is positively correlated with education, and at each educational level women have a higher life expectancy than men (Murtin, F., et al., 2017).
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Data from Murtin, F., et al., 2017.
The Link Between Education and Longevity
Education is also correlated with health regardless of one’s race or ethnic group. Adults who have not finished high school are more than four times as likely as college graduates to be in poor or fair health (Feldstein, 2012).
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Data from Feldstein, 2012.
The Link Between Education and Longevity
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REFERENCES
Murtin, F. et al. (2017), Inequalities in longevity by education in OECD countries: Insights from new OECD estimates, OECD Statistics Working Papers, 2017/02, OECD Publishing, Paris.
Feldstein, Jay. (2012). Medicaid health plans of America: Annual conference. Paper presented at the Increasing Access to Education and Improving Health Care Outcomes.