1. Fetal origins—A life cycle model of health and aging from conception to death
- Author
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Carl-Johan Dalgaard, Casper Worm Hansen, and Holger Strulik
- Subjects
Adult ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Longevity ,Frailty Index ,Health capital ,Health outcomes ,Faculty of Social Sciences ,inutero development ,Developmental psychology ,Human health ,in utero development ,03 medical and health sciences ,Information deficit model ,Empirical research ,fetal origins ,0502 economics and business ,Epidemiology ,ddc:330 ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Positive economics ,050207 economics ,Fetal origins hypothesis ,media_common ,Life Cycle Stages ,Fetus ,Life-cycle hypothesis ,050208 finance ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,3. Good health ,Shock (economics) ,ontogenetic growth ,health deficits ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Path dependence - Abstract
The fetal origins hypothesis suggests that health and nutrition shocks in utero are causally related to health deficits in old age. It has received considerable empirical support, both within epidemiology and economics but so far it has not been integrated into a life cycle theory of human aging and longevity. The present study shows that the health deficit model, based on the frailty index developed in gerontology, generates shock amplification consistent with the hypothesis. In order to discuss human health over the life cycle from conception to death, we develop a theory of ontogenetic growth and health in utero and during childhood, unify it with the health deficit model of adult aging, and discuss the transmission of early-life shocks to late-life health deficit accumulation.
- Published
- 2021
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