Unionization rates and health in Canadian provinces, 2000 - 2020
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55016/ojs/jcph.vi.80333Keywords:
Unions, Health, Mortality, Social Determinants of Health, Canada, Political Economy of HealthAbstract
This paper examines one possible, but understudied, institution that might have an impact on health: unionization. We outline four distinct, although complementary, pathways through which unions might influence population health outcomes based on two axes: the levers that unions can potentially pull to influence any policy environment (collective bargaining and political action) and the manner in which health can be influenced in a society (the Social Determinants of Health and health care). We test whether unionization rates have an impact on total, preventable, and treatable mortality using panel data on Canadian provinces between 2000 and 2020. We find that unionization rates are negatively associated with all three measures of mortality.
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