Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10620/18313
Longitudinal Study: LSAC
Title: The impact of maternal mental health shocks on child health: Estimates from fixed effects instrumental variables models for two cohorts of Australian children
Authors: Le, Huong Thu 
Nguyen, Ha Trong 
Publication Date: May-2018
Pages: 185-225
Keywords: instrumental variables
Australia
intergenerational transmission
health
panel data
Abstract: This paper contributes to an emerging body of literature on intergenerational transmission in health by presenting the causal estimates on the impact of maternal mental health shocks on child health. The potential endogeneity of maternal mental health shocks is dealt with by utilizing nationally representative panel data from two cohorts and individual fixed-effects instrumental variables models. While our results show that poor maternal mental health does not affect children's general health, asthma morbidity, or anthropometric measures, our results indicate that children of depressed mothers do need extra medical care. For this child health outcome, higher adverse impact is found for boys, younger children, children of mothers with lower education, and children in lower-income households. We also find that children of depressed mothers are more likely to have food or digestive allergies and tonsillitis incidence. Our study demonstrates that failing to account for endogeneity of maternal mental health shocks could overestimate the harmful impact of poor maternal mental health on child health. Our findings are robust to a battery of sensitivity and specification tests.
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/ajhe_a_00100
Keywords: Health
Research collection: Journal Articles
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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