scholarly journals The Unequal Consequences of the Covid‐19 Pandemic: Evidence from a Large Representative German Population Survey

Author(s):  
Lea Immel ◽  
Florian Neumeier ◽  
Andreas Peichl
PLoS ONE ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. e91964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Zenger ◽  
Rainer Schaefert ◽  
Christina van der Feltz-Cornelis ◽  
Elmar Brähler ◽  
Winfried Häuser

2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (Supplement) ◽  
pp. 66-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shelly Lundberg

AbstractA substantial increase in the availability of data on psychosocial traits in large representative longitudinal samples has opened up new areas of research for economists and new opportunities for collaborations with psychologists. As an example, I incorporate personality into alternative economic models of marriage, with individual traits associated with either productivity in home or market sectors, or preferences for household public goods. Empirically, personality traits have robust effects on individual propensities to marry and to divorce in a representative sample of the German population. Changes in these patterns across cohorts are consistent with a shift in the principal sources of marital surplus from production complementarities to consumption complementarities in the past few decades. Some personality traits related to divorce are also related to limited self-control in other domains, and suggest that departures from rational action should be considered in models of family behavior. In general, further analysis of the impact of personality and other psychological indicators on family relationships may improve our understanding of variation in partnership and parental decision-making, and of their responses to policy and to institutional environments.


Cephalalgia ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Göbel ◽  
M Petersen-Braun ◽  
D Soyka

This study presents the first account of the prevalence of headache syndromes, defined according to the International Headache Society criteria, in a large representative sample of the German population; 5000 persons representative of the total population were selected from 30,000 households. Subjects were requested to answer a questionnaire about headache occurrence during their lifetime. The completion rate was 81.2%. Seventy-one point four percent ( n = 2902) reported a history of headache. Twenty-seven point five percent fulfilled the criteria for migraine. Thirty-eight point three percent ( n = 1557) met the criteria for tension-type headache and 5.6% ( n = 229) did not fulfil criteria for either migraine or tension-type headache. Significant correlations were found between the prevalence of the different headache syndromes and sociodemographic variables such as sex, age and place of residence. The prevalence of headache did not exhibit any significant differences between the various länder (states or regions) of Germany. When extrapolated to the total population these results reveal that 54 million people in Germany suffer from headache at least occasionally or persistently. These findings suggest that the magnitude of the neurological disorders, migraine and tension-type headache, is seriously underestimated and thus constitutes a major contemporary health problem.


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