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Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

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Page 1: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity
Page 2: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Ewan Gray

University of Aberdeen

Health Economics Research Unit (HERU)

Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Page 3: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Time Preferences

Page 4: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Time Perspective

• Time Perspective is an equivalent psychological concept.

• Consideration of Future Consequences Scale (CFCS) is a survey instrument designed to measure time perspective/time preference. High correlation with time preference rate.

Page 5: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

CFCS

• Examples (1-7 scale):– “I am only concerned about

the present, because I trust that things will work themselves out in the future.”

– “With everything I do, I am only concerned about the immediate consequences (say a period of a couple of days or weeks). ”

05

1015

Percent

0 20 40 60 80CFCS

Page 6: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Incredibly simple model

Other factors influencing intentions

Time Preferences

IntentionsHealth Behaviours

Page 7: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

DHS

• DnB Household Survey (DHS)– Data from 1993-2009. Use 1996-2009.– 2,000 (1660 by 2009) households on CentERpanel

(representative of Netherlands population). Online, arrangements for access with no computer. Self-report.

– Includes: Basic demographic, basic health (BMI, limiting health problem, smoking, alcohol consumption), detailed income, assets, liabilities and some interesting psychological variables (time preferences, risk preferences, personality).

– Includes CFCS, height and weight. – Previous cross-sectional study found weak evidence of

association of high TP and increased BMI (Borghans and Golsteyn, 2006).

Page 8: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Aim

• Do time preferences (CFCS score) effect the development of obesity?

• Previous studies have not obtained a conclusive answer.– Five previous studies (4 cross-sectional, 1 ecological) have found

mixed evidence of a weak effect of time preference.

– Statistical significance only achieved for sub-groups or in some models in each cross-sectional study. Studies used moderately large data-sets from USA, Netherlands, England and Japan.

Page 9: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Methods

• Non-parametric– Plot Kaplan-Meier survival functions for quartiles of

CFCS distribution. Log-rank test.

• Semi-parametric– Cox regression

– CFCS score is independent.

– Controlling for age, gender, education and initial BMI.

– ).exp()(

)exp()()|(

543210

0

CFCSSecondaryUUniversityGenderageth

xthxth

Page 10: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Results

Log-rank test: χ2 = 14.16, p 0.0027

Page 11: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Results 2

Variable Model 1 2 – Quadratic Age 3 – Interactions

CFCS 0.01**(0.004) 0.011**(0.004) 0.011*** (0.004)

Age -0.01***(0.003) 0.061***(0.018) 0.067***(0.018)

Gender (Male) -0.386***(0.067) -0.385***(0.075) -1.474***(0.289)

University -1.18***(0.225) -1.104***(0.226) -1.113***(0.226)

U. Secondary -0.544***(0.097) -0.486***(0.096) -0.502***(0.099)

Age2 -0.0007***(0.0002) -0.0009***(0.0002)

Gender*Age 0.023***(0.006)

Coef. (s.e.), *P<0.1, **P<0.05, ***P<0.01

Page 12: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Results 3Variable 5- InitialBMI

CFCS 0.015***(0.004)

Age 0.063***(0.022)

Gender (Male) -0.221(0.333)

University 0.369(0.284)

U. Secondary 0.346***(0.126)

Age2 -0.0007***(0.0002)

Gender*Age 0.003(0.006)

Initial BMI 0.288***(0.006)

Page 13: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Sensitivity to Obesity BMI cut-off value

Page 14: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Conclusions• CFCS is significantly associated with

hazard of obesity.

• A high CFCS predicts greater hazard of obesity. Hazard ratio (for normalised CFCS): 1.151 (1.07, 1.238).

• This estimate is robust to different specifications of the control variables.

Page 15: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Challenges/Limitations• Data:

– Attrition/censoring is high and may be non-random

– Missing and implausible values

• Models:– Other BMI dynamics than occurrence of BMI>30 are of interest.

– Other response variables may be more appropriate such as BMI or a binary dependent with a probit or logit link function.

Page 16: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Questions?

Page 17: Ewan Gray University of Aberdeen Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) Time Preferences and the Development of Obesity

Summary Statistics

Variable 1996 Mean (s.d.) or % 2009 Mean (s.d.) or %

Age 47.0(14.2) 54.9(14.4)

Female 46.3% 44.4%

BMI 24.3(3.46) 26.0(3.99)

CFCS score 41.63 (11.1) 42.95 (8.17)

University Education (2002) 2.0% 8.89%

U. Secondary Education(2002)

7.9% 26.9%