![]() |
It appears the same behaviors that ruin credit ruin health too. Credit: © Ivelin Radkov / Fotolia |
Home »
BEHAVIOR
,
HEALTH & MEDICINE
,
HEALTH POLICY
,
HEALTHY AGING
,
HUMAN QUIRKS
,
INTELLIGENCE
,
LIVING WELL
,
MARKETS & FINANCE
,
MENTAL HEALTH
,
PUBLIC HEALTH
,
SCIENCE & SOCIETY
,
STATISTICS
,
STEM Education News
» Credit score can also describe health status
Credit score can also describe health status
By Unknown

It might also be saying something about a person's health status, too, according to a new analysis from a long-term study of the physical and mental health of more than 1,000 New Zealanders who have been monitored continuously from birth to age 38.
The latest paper from the study, appearing this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, has found a strong relationship between low credit scores and poor cardiovascular health.
This doesn't mean that poor financial management hurts your health, post-doctoral researcher Salomon Israel of Duke University is quick to point out. It's that the sort of personal attributes that can lead to a poor credit score can also contribute to poor health.
This and other studies from the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study in New Zealand have found that self-control, planning ahead and perseverance are attributes that predict both better financial status and better health.
"What it comes down to is that people who don't take care of their money don't take care of their health," said study leader Terrie Moffitt, who is the Nannerl O. Keohane university professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke. She said this study confirms what the insurance and financial industries may already understand.
Backtracking into the data on these study participants, the researchers found that about 20% of the relationship between credit scores and heart health was accounted for by the attitudes, behaviors and competencies displayed by the study members when they were younger than age 10.
"We're showing that these things take root early in life," Israel said.
Harvard economist David Laibson, who was not involved in the research, said the study "fundamentally transforms our understanding of the psychological factors that connect our health and wealth."
Lamar Pierce, an associate professor of organization & strategy at Washington University in St. Louis, agreed. "This study is important because it identifies common cognitive foundations long before financial and physical health problems emerge," said Pierce, who was not involved in this study. "It provides hope that early life intervention can impede the development of life-long patterns of illness and financial struggle."
Using a standard measure called the Framingham cardiovascular risk score, the Duke researchers estimated the "heart age" of their participants, based on blood pressure, cholesterol levels, blood sugar and smoking habits. At age 38, the participants' Framingham "heart ages" ranged from 22 to 85 years. Participants with higher credit scores had younger "heart ages." The components of the Dunedin study's human capital measure -- educational attainment, cognitive ability and self-control -- each predicted higher credit scores and younger heart age.
The idea of checking credit scores against the detailed personal data in the Dunedin study came from a conversation Moffitt had with her seatmate on a plane about a decade ago. When she told her travelling companion from the life insurance industry that she studied self-control and life outcomes, he said, "We do that too, but we use credit scores."
"The thing that's so compelling about credit scores is that they're both predictive and retrospective," said co-author Avshalom Caspi, the Edward M. Arnett professor of psychology and neuroscience, psychiatry & behavioral sciences at Duke. "They offer a window on the future, but also a window on the past."
In recent years, credit scores have been used for pre-employment screening and many other functions beyond their original intent, Israel said. This study seems to bear out their usefulness as a proxy for a person's reliability and steadfastness, and in turn how healthy they may be.
"Our findings suggest that life insurance companies that acquire an applicant's credit score are also indirectly acquiring information about that applicant's educational attainment, intelligence and personality, right back to childhood," the authors wrote.
The link might work the other way as well. In less developed countries where credit scores aren't available, a Harvard team has been experimenting with using a 40-minute personality quiz to assess candidates' credit-worthiness for microloans.
This research was supported by the New Zealand Health Research Council, US National Institute on Aging (AG032282, T32-AG000029), the UK Medical Research Council (MR/K00381X) the Jacobs Foundation and the Yad Hanadiv Rothschild Foundation.
Source: Duke University
Posted Server or Office Location At :
Koduru, Andhra Pradesh 516101, India
Environment Now
The 500 million years ocean history
Brachiopod Paraspirifer bownockeri from the Middle Devonian of Ohio (USA); Width: 5.6 cm. Picture: U. Jansen, Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt am Main. GEOMAR coordinates European research and...Facebook of the Planet Science
David Kramer, MSU Hannah Distinguished Professor in Photosynthesis and Bioenergetics, has created the Facebook of plant science. Courtesy of MSU By building PhotosynQ – a handheld device with...The mystery of the Alpine long-eared bat
An Alpine long-eared bat fully airborne , UPV/EHU The alpine long-eared bat was discovered...
Technology+Physics
Is not there Big Bang ? A quantum equation show that the universe has no beginning
The universe could have existed forever, according to a new model that applies quantum correction terms to complement the theory of general relativity of Einstein. The model can also explain...The Interview, J. Robert Oppenheimer talks about the organization of the Manhattan Project
J. Robert Oppenheimer's Interview In this rare interview, J. Robert Oppenheimer talks about the organization of the Manhattan Project and some of the scientists that he helped to recruit...Quantum computer as detector shows space is not squeezed
As the Earth rotates every 24 hours, the orientation of the ions in the quantum computer/detector changes with respect to the Sun’s rest frame. If space were squeezed in one direction and not...
Health + Medicine
Treadmill performance predicts mortality
Treadmill (stock image). Credit: © viktoriagavril / Fotolia Analyzing data from...Beliefs can regulate effects of nicotine on the human brain
Two identical cigarettes led to a new discovery. Study participants inhaled nicotine, yet they showed significantly different brain activity. Why the difference? Some subjects were told their...Genetically speaking, mammals are more like their fathers
Newborn baby and his father's hand. Specifically, the research shows that although we inherit equal amounts of genetic mutations from our parents -- the mutations that make us who we are and not...
Plants + Animals
Genetically speaking, mammals are more like their fathers
Newborn baby and his father's hand. Specifically, the research shows that although we inherit equal amounts of genetic mutations from our parents -- the mutations that make us who we are and not...Newborn neurons in adult brain may help us adapt to environment
Neurons . "New neurons may serve as a means to fine-tune the hippocampus to the predicted environment," Opendak says. "In particular, seeking out rewarding experiences or avoiding stressful...From Pig to Fuel - Anaerobic digester generates energy, reduces odors
Teng Lim is operating a small-scale anaerobic digester at the MU swine farm in Columbia. The system generates energy and can mitigate hog odor. Courtesy Jon Lamb. The University of...
SPACE + TIME
Space Hubble's Little Sombrero
European Space Agency Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA Galaxies can take many shapes and be oriented any way relative to us in the sky. This can make it hard to...UCLA and CASIS to collaborate on International Space Station study of possible therapy for bone loss
A study of rodents on the International Space Station will allow astronauts to test the ability of a bone-forming molecule to direct stem cells to induce bone formation. Credit: Nasa UCLA has...NASA's Dawn Spacecraft Captures Best-Ever View of Dwarf Planet
This animation of the dwarf planet Ceres was made by combining images taken by the Dawn spacecraft on January 25, 2015. NASA's Dawn spacecraft has returned the sharpest images ever seen of the...
Science + Society
Facebook of the Planet Science
David Kramer, MSU Hannah Distinguished Professor in Photosynthesis and Bioenergetics, has created the Facebook of plant science. Courtesy of MSU By building PhotosynQ – a handheld device with...Scientist to Gather Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Melting Permafrost
Goddard scientist Emily Wilson poses here with an early version or prototype of her recently miniaturized laser heterodyne radiometer — an instrument for which she received a patent in 2014. Image...‘Love, Rock and Revolution’ features legendary music photographer Jim Marshall’s work
Never-before-seen 1960s photographic work by legendary San Francisco rock and roll photographer Jim Marshall (1936-2010) will be featured in “The Haight: Love, Rock and Revolution,” an exhibit...