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Mortality Risk
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Journal Article
Demography (2012) 49 (3): 773–796.
Published: 23 June 2012
...Ryan K. Masters Abstract In this article, I examine the black-white crossover in U.S. adult all-cause mortality, emphasizing how cohort effects condition age-specific estimates of mortality risk. I employ hierarchical age-period-cohort methods on the National Health Interview Survey-Linked...
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Published: 10 May 2017
Fig. 5 Mortality risk ratios for all-cause mortality convergence for men in East and West Germany. Ratios above 1 indicate higher mortality for East German men. Rate ratios are calculated over five-year periods from 1984–1988 to 2009–2013, centered on the middle year. Source: HMD ( 2016 )
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Published: 11 August 2012
Fig. 2 Fitted all-cause mortality risk for men and women across education. Probability is derived from adjusted Model 1 estimates using clog-log discrete-time hazards. All variables are centered on mean values except education and gender
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in Life and Death in the American City: Men’s Life Expectancy in 25 Major American Cities From 1990 to 2015
> Demography
Published: 01 November 2019
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Published: 09 January 2014
Fig. 2 Kaplan-Meier hazard estimates of infant mortality risk, by family structure and the percentage of women aged 15–49 in polygynous unions at the region level. N = 236,336 births. Source: Demographic and Health Survey
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in Educational Disparities in Adult Mortality Across U.S. States: How Do They Differ, and Have They Changed Since the Mid-1980s?
> Demography
Published: 03 January 2019
Fig. 2 Annual mortality risk by education level and U.S. state of residence in the twenty-first century. Estimated rates shown are for U.S.-born white adults 65 years of age. The figure includes 36 large-sample states (see the Methods section).
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in Educational Disparities in Adult Mortality Across U.S. States: How Do They Differ, and Have They Changed Since the Mid-1980s?
> Demography
Published: 03 January 2019
Fig. 3 Relative and absolute mortality risk by education level across the two periods. LTHS = less than high school, HS = high school, MTHS = more than high school. Mortality estimates shown are for U.S.-born white adults 65 years of age.
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in Uncrossing the U.S. Black-White Mortality Crossover: The Role of Cohort Forces in Life Course Mortality Risk
> Demography
Published: 23 June 2012
Fig. 1 Logged age-specific mortality risk of U.S. black and white male populations across time. Data are from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) ( http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/life_tables.htm ). a Denotes the age at black-white crossover
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Journal Article
Demography (1981) 18 (2): 217–230.
Published: 01 May 1981
.../2061224 DEMOGRAPHV@ Volume 18, Number 2 May 1981 METHODS FOR THE ANALYSIS OF MORTALITY RISKS ACROSS HETEROGENEOUS SMALL POPULATIONS: EXAMINATION OF SPACE·TIME GRADIENTS IN CANCER MORTALITY IN NORTH CAROLINA COUNTIES 1970-75 Kenneth G. Manton Community and Family Medicine, and Center for Demographic...
Journal Article
Demography (1972) 9 (3): 485–498.
Published: 01 August 1972
... for Population Projections by Sex and Age. Population Studies No. 25 . ( 1956 ). New York : United Nations . DEMOGRAPHY Volume 9, Number 3 August 1972 MORTALITY RISKS, SEQUENTIAL DECISIONS ON BIRTHS, AND POPULATION GROWTH Donald J. O'Hara Department of Economics, University of Rochester, Rochester, New...
Journal Article
Demography (1993) 30 (3): 477–488.
Published: 01 August 1993
... – 107 . 10.1002/sim.4780070113 Demography, Vol. 30, No.3, August 1993 Siblings' Neonatal Mortality Risks and Birth Spacing in Bangladesh* Elizabeth Zenger Princeton University Office of Population Research 21 Prospect Ave. Princeton, NJ 08544 This paper studies the familial association...
Journal Article
Demography (1994) 31 (3): 487–507.
Published: 01 August 1994
...Ken R. Smith; Norman J. Waitzman Abstract The purpose of this paper is to examine the hypothesis that marital and poverty status interact in their effects on mortality risks beyond their main effects. This study examines the epidemiological bases for applying an additive rather than...
Journal Article
Demography (2011) 48 (3): 1105–1125.
Published: 19 May 2011
...Theodore D. Fuller Abstract There has been a growing consensus that moderate consumption of alcohol is associated with a lower risk of mortality and that this association is probably causal. However, a recent review article has raised a serious challenge to this consensus. In short, it determined...
Journal Article
Demography (1987) 24 (3): 299–322.
Published: 01 August 1987
...James C. Cramer DEMOGRAPHY© Volume 24, Number 3 August 1987 SOCIAL FACTORS AND INFANT MORTALITY: IDENTIFYING HIGH-RISK GROUPS AND PROXIMATE CAUSES James C. Cramer Sociology Department, University of California, Davis, California 95616 The infant mortality rate .. is regarded as one of the most...
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in A Social History of Disease: Contextualizing the Rise and Fall of Social Inequalities in Cause-Specific Mortality
> Demography
Published: 16 August 2016
Fig. 1 Ideal characterization of the history of the risk of mortality for a single hypothetical cause of death as it is increasingly but unequally controlled
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in Uncrossing the U.S. Black-White Mortality Crossover: The Role of Cohort Forces in Life Course Mortality Risk
> Demography
Published: 23 June 2012
Fig. 3 Fitted logged mortality risks of U.S. black and white male and female adjusted samples of NHIS-LMF 1986–2006, and fitted logged mortality rates from HAPC-CCREMs
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in Uncrossing the U.S. Black-White Mortality Crossover: The Role of Cohort Forces in Life Course Mortality Risk
> Demography
Published: 23 June 2012
Fig. 2 Logged single-year age-specific adult mortality risks and logged five-year age-specific mortality rates of U.S. black and white males and females, NHIS-LMF 1986–2006
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Journal Article
Demography (2012) 49 (1): 315–336.
Published: 13 January 2012
...Jennifer Karas Montez; Robert A. Hummer; Mark D. Hayward Abstract A vast literature has documented the inverse association between educational attainment and U.S. adult mortality risk but given little attention to identifying the optimal functional form of the association. A theoretical explanation...
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Journal Article
Demography (1981) 18 (3): 389–410.
Published: 01 August 1981
...Kenneth G. Manton; Eric Stallard; James W. Vaupel Abstract Methods are presented which produce Maximum Likelihood Estimates (MLE) of the degree of heterogeneity in individual mortality risks under a variety of assumptions about the age trajectory of those mortality risks. With these estimates...
Journal Article
Demography (2015) 52 (1): 39–60.
Published: 25 December 2014
... in mortality risks with age. Physiological senescence is generally thought to begin at birth, if not earlier, but models of demographic aging (i.e., an increase in mortality risks) normally start at considerably later ages. This apparent inconsistency can be solved by assuming the existence of two mortality...
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