“…First, better-educated individuals tend to engage in fewer unhealthy behaviors, such as smoking (e.g., Jürges, Reinhold, and Salm, 2011) and behaviors leading to obesity (e.g., Brunello, Fabbri, and Fort, 2013). 1 Second, individuals with higher levels of education are more likely to work in white-collar occupations (e.g., Autor and Handel, 2013;Speer, 2017), which are less intensive in manual tasks and thus less likely to cause workplace accidents or exposure to unsafe conditions (e.g., Guardado and Ziebarth, 2016). 2 Finally, better-educated individuals may have better access to health care or be more efficient producers of health (e.g., Lange, 2011;Jeon and Pohl, 2017).…”