BrooklynDodger(s) comment: The pattern only confuses. Married late for men, and being divorced a long time for women seems to predict health.
American Journal of Epidemiology 2009 170(5):546-555
Marital Trajectories and Mortality Among US Adults
Correspondence to Dr. Matthew E. Dupre, Social Science Research Institute, Duke University, P.O. Box 90420, 2024 West Main Street, Durham, NC (e-mail: med11@geriduke.edu).
Received for publication May 19, 2008. Accepted for publication April 27, 2009.
More than a century of empirical evidence links marital status to mortality. However, the hazards of dying associated with long-term marital trajectories and contributing risk factors are largely unknown. The authors used 1992–2006 prospective data from a cohort of US adults to investigate the impact of current marital status, marriage timing, divorce and widow transitions, and marital durations on mortality. Multivariate hazard ratios were significantly higher for adults currently divorced and widowed, married at young ages (
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