1-20 of 1314

Search Results for Two-mortality processes

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Image
Published: 07 June 2013
Fig. 6 The two-mortality-process model fit to the Swedish early period (1820) and Chilean current period (2005) mortality data and the corresponding fitted LARs More
Image
Published: 07 June 2013
Fig. 6 The two-mortality-process model fit to the Swedish early period (1820) and Chilean current period (2005) mortality data and the corresponding fitted LARs More
Journal Article
Demography (2016) 53 (6): 2105–2119.
Published: 11 November 2016
...David J. Sharrow; James J. Anderson Abstract The rise in human life expectancy has involved declines in intrinsic and extrinsic mortality processes associated, respectively, with senescence and environmental challenges. To better understand the factors driving this rise, we apply a two-process...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Image
Published: 07 June 2013
Fig. 5 The two-mortality-process model fit to the Swedish cohort data from 1885 and 1905 for males and females, the corresponding fitted LARs, and the intrinsic mortality proportions More
Journal Article
Demography (2017) 54 (5): 1999.
Published: 13 January 2017
Image
Published: 07 June 2013
Fig. 4 The two-process mortality model fit to the U.S. period data from 1970 and 2005 for males and females, the corresponding fitted LARs, and the intrinsic mortality proportions More
Journal Article
Demography (2013) 50 (5): 1563–1591.
Published: 07 June 2013
...Fig. 6 The two-mortality-process model fit to the Swedish early period (1820) and Chilean current period (2005) mortality data and the corresponding fitted LARs ...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
Demography (2022) 59 (3): 1173–1194.
Published: 01 June 2022
... affects the exposure to kin loss and (2) how family bereavement may contribute to the reproduction of historical memory in the long term. I explore these two processes using a unique genealogical database that records the complete demographic history of Rio Negro, a genocide-affected population...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Demography (2023) 60 (1): 255–279.
Published: 01 February 2023
...Björn Quanjer; Ingrid K. van Dijk; Matthias Rosenbaum-Feldbrügge Abstract We investigate how experiencing parental death in infancy, childhood, or adolescence affected individuals' health using two distinct measures: mortality before age 20 and young adult height. Using two complementary indicators...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (1999) 36 (3): 339–353.
Published: 01 August 1999
... process with vary- ing health effects at different stages ofits progression, and test sev- eral related hypotheses. Findings suggest higher rates of infant mortality in communities experiencing intense U.S. migration. How- ever, two factors diminish the disruptive effects of migration: migradollars...
Journal Article
Demography (1995) 32 (1): 1–16.
Published: 01 February 1995
... be illusory. I use a two-step process to address these problems. Drawing on internal evidence and commentaries in early volumes of Mortality Statistics , I use GLS regression to estimate the prevalence of undercounts. Then I create a series of GLS models that use registration area data to estimate early...
Journal Article
Demography (1966) 3 (2): 423–444.
Published: 01 June 1966
..., 1962. Figures for the Belgian Congo were a weighted average for the white and indigenous population. of childhood correlates so highly with infant mortality that it can be ignored." The writer decided to include two addi- tional variables as control variables. The first of these is population density...
Journal Article
Demography (1999) 36 (4): 497–503.
Published: 01 November 1999
... models that estimate the influence of multiple time-invariant factors on survival over a time interval separating two samples. This approach can be used whenever the survival process can be adequately conceptualized as an irreversible single-decrement process (e.g., mortality, the transition to first...
Journal Article
Demography (2017) 54 (6): 2043–2071.
Published: 03 November 2017
... populations to be healthier than others ( prevalence ), and recognizes that the two may be quite different (Kindig and Stoddart 2003 ; Rose 2001 ). Comparative demographic health research has traditionally focused on overall mortality or on infant and child mortality as important structural components...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Demography (2015) 52 (1): 61–82.
Published: 14 January 2015
... to conceiving pregnancies. We explore and test two opposing reasons for bias in the distribution of observed births. First, some women who report not wanting more children could face starvation or frailty; and if these women are infecund, the remaining unwanted births would appear more healthy. Second, some...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Demography (1990) 27 (2): 233–250.
Published: 01 May 1990
... for a large number of developed countries. The results indicate that divorced persons, especially divorced men, have the highest death rates among the unmarried groups of the respective genders; the excess mortality of unmarried persons relative to the married has been generally increasing over the past two...
Journal Article
Demography (2014) 51 (4): 1295–1317.
Published: 03 June 2014
... different cohorts experience different mortality selection processes. The rate of biological aging is conceptually distinct from the rate of demographic aging; although sometimes the latter is used to approximate the former, it is misleading to use the two interchangeably (Yashin et al. 2002b...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Demography (1991) 28 (4): 619–637.
Published: 01 November 1991
.... In general these explorations can be divided into two parts: a theoretical literature showing that heterogeneity in individual frailty' can have a substantial effect on observed age patterns of mortality through the process of selection (e.g., Vaupel, Yashin, and Manton 1988) and an empirical literature...
Journal Article
Demography (1994) 31 (3): 487–507.
Published: 01 August 1994
..., in all processes leading to all-cause and heart disease Double Jeopardy 503 mortality, although these causal roles differ. More important, when these two risk factors exist together, they generate synergistic effects. Less clear, according to this study, is why synergistic effects exist among poor...
Journal Article
Demography (1997) 34 (1): 1–15.
Published: 01 February 1997
... Mortality and on a New Mode of Determining Life Contingencies . Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London , 115 , 513 – 85 . 10.1098/rstl.1825.0026 Gompertz B. ( 1862 ). A Supplement to Two Papers Published in the Transactions of the Royal Society on the Science Connected...