Does health information affect lifestyle behaviours? The impact of a diabetes diagnosis
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Diabetes Health information Lifestyle behaviours Body mass index Regression discontinuity design Administrative data
Date
2022-10-17Referencia bibliográfica
Alessio Gaggero... [et al.]. Does health information affect lifestyle behaviours? The impact of a diabetes diagnosis, Social Science & Medicine, Volume 314, 2022, 115420, ISSN 0277-9536, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115420]
Patrocinador
Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities PID2019-105688RB-I00; Ministry of Economics and Competitiveness PID2020-114040RB-100; Tomas y Valiente Fellowship - Madrid Institute for Advanced Study (MIAS) Comunidad de Madrid SI1/PJI/2019-00326Résumé
Despite an increasing interest in the effect of health information on health-behaviours, evidence on the causal
impact of a diagnosis on lifestyle factors is still mixed and does not often account for long-term effects. We
explore the role of health information in individual health-related decisions by identifying the causal impact of a
type-2 diabetes diagnosis on body mass index (BMI) and lifestyle behaviours. We employ a fuzzy regression
discontinuity design (RDD) exploiting the exogenous cut-off value in the diagnosis of type-2 diabetes provided by
a biomarker (glycated haemoglobin) drawn from unique administrative longitudinal data from Spain. We find
that following a type-2 diabetes diagnosis individuals appear to reduce their weight in the short-term. Differently
from previous studies, we also provide evidence of statistically significant long-term impacts of a type-2 diabetes
diagnosis on BMI up to three years from the diagnosis. We do not find perceivable effects of a type-2 diabetes
diagnosis on quitting smoking or drinking. Overall, health information appears to have a sustained causal impact
on weight reduction, a key lifestyle and risk factor among individuals with type-2 diabetes.