Bringing You More Than the Weekend: Union Membership
and Self-rated Health in the United States

Megan M. Reynolds, Duke University
David Brady, Duke University

Previous research suggests that higher incomes, safe workplaces, job
security and healthcare
access all contribute to favorable health. Reflecting the interest of
economic and political
sociologists in power relations and institutions, union membership has
been linked with
many such influences on health. Nevertheless, the potential
relationship between union
membership and health has received little attention. Using logistic
regression and propensity score matching, this study examines the
association between union membership and
self-rated health generally and among select subgroups of the
workforce with the General
Social Survey from 1973 to 2006. Initial bivariate analyses suggest
that union membership
is actually associated with worse health. This association disappears
when controlling for
demographics, then reverses and becomes significant when controlling
for labor market
characteristics. In well-specified models, union membership has a
significant positive effect
on favorable self-rated health. The effect roughly offsets the effects
of five years of aging or
being divorced (as opposed to married). In addition, propensity score
matching analyses
demonstrate that union membership has a beneficial, significant
average treatment effect
for the treated. We show that much of union membership’s effect in the
overall sample is
due to the mechanism of higher incomes, but that among men, the less
educated, and
those with lower incomes, the union-health advantage is not explained
fully by income.
The effect of union membership also appears to be stable over time. We
conclude by
encouraging further research on how power relations and institutions
shape health.

http://www.soc.duke.edu/~brady/web/sf12.pdf


-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to