4.5 Article

Urban noise, sleep disruption and health

Journal

APPLIED ECONOMICS
Volume 54, Issue 50, Pages 5782-5799

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2022.2053054

Keywords

Sleep disruption; health; noise exposure; instrumental variable estimation

Categories

Funding

  1. MOE Academic Research Fund [R-297-000-145-115]

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This study investigates the causal relationship between self-reported sleep disruption and health using individual-specific exposure to neighbor noise as an instrument. The results provide evidence of significant causal effects of sleep disruption on cardiovascular problems, auto-immune diseases, and headache, highlighting the importance of noise-related public policies.
Numerous studies have linked sleep disruption to a variety of poor health outcomes, but social scientists still have a very limited understanding of the overall importance of sleep for health in the general population. Limitations on both the scope and duration of laboratory studies make it difficult to establish longer-term causal links, and potential reverse causality may significantly weaken causal inference with observational data. As a result, there is little empirical evidence on the potential causal impact of commonly encountered urban noise-induced sleep disruption on health in otherwise healthy adults. Using a survey of Dutch adults, we contribute to the effort to investigate the causal relationship between self-reported sleep disruption and health by using individual-specific exposure to neighbour noise as an instrument for sleep disruption. We argue that neighbour noise is a relatively ex-ante unobservable exogenous shock, and we provide quantitative evidence that it fulfills the relevance, exogeneity, and exclusion restrictions for validity as an instrument. Consistent with theory, we find statistically and economically significant causal effects of sleep disruption on cardiovascular problems, auto-immune diseases such as arthritis and lung disease, and headache. The results survive a battery of robustness checks and highlight the importance of noise-related public policies.

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