Roommate effects in health outcomes.
Paul FrijtersAsad IslamChitwan LaljiDebayan PakrashiPublished in: Health economics (2020)
We use randomized roommate assignment in dormitories in a college in Kolkata in India to examine peer effects in weight gains among roommates. We use administrative data on weight, height, and test scores of students at the time of college admission and then survey these students at the end of their first and second years in college. We do not find any significant roommate specific peer effect in weight gain. Our results rather suggest that an obese roommate reduces the probability that the other roommates become obese in subsequent years. We examine potential mechanism using survey data on students' eating habits, smoking, exercise, and sleeping patterns. We find that obese roommates sleep longer, which in turn improves the sleep pattern of others, which might explain the weak negative effect of obese roommates on the weight of others in the same room.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- weight gain
- body mass index
- bariatric surgery
- physical activity
- adipose tissue
- birth weight
- metabolic syndrome
- high school
- type diabetes
- obese patients
- electronic health record
- big data
- emergency department
- high intensity
- cross sectional
- sleep quality
- clinical trial
- randomized controlled trial
- double blind
- smoking cessation
- open label
- study protocol
- phase iii
- climate change
- deep learning
- body weight
- phase ii
- body composition