journal article Aug 01, 2011

Killing Me Softly: The Fetal Origins Hypothesis

View at Publisher Save 10.1257/jep.25.3.153
Abstract
In the epidemiological literature, the fetal origins hypothesis associated with David J. Barker posits that chronic, degenerative conditions of adult health, including heart disease and type 2 diabetes, may be triggered by circumstances decades earlier, particularly, by in utero nutrition. Economists have expanded on this hypothesis, investigating a broader range of fetal shocks and circumstances and have found a wealth of later-life impacts on outcomes including test scores, educational attainment, and income, along with health. In the process, they have provided some of the most credible observational evidence in support of the hypothesis. The magnitude of the impacts is generally large. Thus, the fetal origins hypothesis has not only survived contact with economics, but has flourished.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
78
[2]
Almond Douglas Handbook of Labor Economics (2011)
[10]
Baten Jörg Hungry and Stupid: Numeracy and the Impact of High Food Prices in Industrializing Britain (2007)
[16]
Adult Height and Childhood Disease

Carlos Bozzoli, Angus Deaton, Climent Quintana-Domeque

Demography 10.1353/dem.0.0079
[26]
Health Insurance Eligibility, Utilization of Medical Care, and Child Health

J. Currie, J. Gruber

The Quarterly Journal of Economics 10.2307/2946684
[35]
Datar Ashlesha Demography (2010)
[42]
Forsdahl A. British Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine (1977)
[43]
Forsdahl A. The Cardiovascular Survey in Finnmark (1978)
[46]
On the Concept of Health Capital and the Demand for Health

Michael Grossman

Journal of Political Economy 10.1086/259880

Showing 50 of 78 references

Cited By
1,150
Journal of Health Economics
Journal of the European Economic As...
SSRN Electronic Journal
American Journal of Obstetrics and...
Economic Modelling
Obesity, Poverty and Public Policy

Rachel Griffith · 2022

The Economic Journal
Education Economics
Structural Transformation, Agriculture, Climate and the Environment

Christopher B. Barrett, Ariel Ortiz-Bobea · 2021

SSRN Electronic Journal
Journal of Health Economics
Social Science & Medicine
Journal of Economic Perspectives
Violence, selection and infant mortality in Congo

Olivier Dagnelie, Giacomo Davide De Luca · 2018

Journal of Health Economics
Related

You May Also Like

Toward a New Conception of the Environment-Competitiveness Relationship

Michael E Porter, Claas van der Linde · 1995

9,605 citations

Institutions

Douglass C North · 1991

4,454 citations

Social Media and Fake News in the 2016 Election

Hunt Allcott, Matthew Gentzkow · 2017

4,197 citations

Quantile Regression

Roger Koenker, Kevin F Hallock · 2001

4,067 citations

Anomalies: The Endowment Effect, Loss Aversion, and Status Quo Bias

Daniel Kahneman, Jack L Knetsch · 1991

3,412 citations