wage loss
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

41
(FIVE YEARS 14)

H-INDEX

6
(FIVE YEARS 2)

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongye Sun ◽  
Giseung Kim

PurposeThis study aims to investigate the extent to which overeducation imposes wage effects on university graduates, taking into account the individual heterogeneity due to skills and innate ability.Design/methodology/approachUsing Graduates Occupation and Mobility Survey (GOMS) 2019 and Korea Dictionary of Occupations (KDOT) 2019, the overeducated and adequately educated graduates are differentiated by the job analysis (JA) measure. To unveil the masked results, the unconditional quantile regression (UQR) accompanying skills and field of study mismatches is adopted to explore the wage effects of overeducation across the overall wage distribution.FindingsEmpirical evidence shows that the incidence of overeducation is high; however, overeducated graduates only suffer a 6.5% wage loss relative to their adequately matched peers. The findings indicate that regardless of being derived from either overskilled or field of study mismatch, genuine overeducation impose a higher wage penalty at all percentiles relative to the apparent overeducation. Meanwhile, high-ability men suffer lower-wage penalties than their low-ability peers, whereas the inverted “U” pattern is exhibited for women. The theoretical hypotheses differ depending on the estimated results by gender.Research limitations/implicationsEach measure of educational mismatch has been criticized for its insurmountable shortcoming. The recent graduates are likely to overstate the job requires of skills.Originality/valueThis paper contributes to the insufficient evidence on the multiple aspects of wage effects of overeducation by providing new and rigorous examinations and by focusing on the country experiencing rapid economic growth, industrial upgrading and educational expansion.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aditya Shrinivas ◽  
Suhani Jalota ◽  
Aprajit Mahajan ◽  
Grant Miller

Background: A key aim of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) is to protect individuals and households against the financial risk of illness. Large-scale health insurance expansions are therefore a central focus of the UHC agenda. Importantly, however, health insurance does not protect against a key dimension of financial risk associated with illness: forgone wage income (due to short-term disability). In this paper, we quantify the economic burden of illness in India attributable--separately--to wage loss and to medical care spending, as well as differences in them across the socio-economic distribution. Methods: We use data from two Indian longitudinal household surveys: (i) the Village Dynamics in South Asia (VDSA) survey (1,350 households surveyed every month for 60 months between 2010 and 2015) and (ii) the Indian Human Development Survey (IHDS) (more than 40,000 households surveyed in 2005 and again in 2011). The VDSA allows us to study the economic dynamics of illness using high-frequency observations, and the IHDS allows us to confirm our findings in a nationally-representative sample. Both contain individual- and household-level information about illness, wage income, and medical spending over time. We use longitudinal variation in illness to estimate regression models of economic burden separately for wage loss and medical care spending across the socio-economic distribution. Our regression models include a series of fixed effects that control for differences in time-invariant household (or individual) characteristics and time-varying factors common across households. Findings: 1,184 households (88%) in the VDSA sample reported an episode of illness over 60 months, and 15770 households (40%) in the IHDS reported an illness in the preceding year. In the VDSA sample, on average, a day of illness was associated with a reduction in monthly per capita wage income of Rs 77 [95% CI -99 to -57] and an increase in monthly per capita medical spending of Rs 126 [95% CI 110-142]. Variation across the socio-economic distribution was substantial. Among the poorest households, wage loss due to illness is roughly 15% of total household spending--nearly three times greater than medical spending. Alternatively, among the most affluent households, wage loss is less than 5% of total household spending--and only one-third of medical spending. Put differently, wage loss accounts for more than 80% of the total economic burden of illness among the poorest households, but only about 20% of the economic burden of illness among the most affluent. Estimates from the IHDS sample show that this socio-economic gradient is present in the Indian population generally. Interpretation: Wage loss accounts for a substantial share of the total economic burden of illness in India--and disproportionately so among the poorest households. If Universal Health Coverage truly aims to protect households against the financial risk of illness--particularly poor households, the inclusion of wage loss insurance or another illness-related income replacement benefit is needed.


Author(s):  
Leigh Anne Shafer ◽  
Seth Shaffer ◽  
Julia Witt ◽  
Zoann Nugent ◽  
Charles N Bernstein

Abstract Introduction We aimed to determine both direct (medical) and indirect (lost wages) costs of IBD and the association between the degree of IBD-related disability and extent of IBD-related costs. Methods Persons age 18-65 from the population-based University of Manitoba IBD Research Registry completed a survey including the IBD Disability Index (IBDDI) and questions related to employment, missed work (absenteeism), and reduced productivity at work (presenteeism). Administrative health data including surgeries, hospitalizations, physician claims, and prescriptions were linked to the survey and assessed. To calculate annual wage loss, number of days of missed work was multiplied by the average wage in Manitoba for the given occupation per Statistics Canada. Costs were adjusted to 2016-17 Canadian dollars. Using descriptive and regression analysis, we explored the association between IBDDI and annual direct and indirect costs associated with IBD. Results Average annual medical costs rose from $1918 among those with IBDDI 0-4 to $9,993 among those with IBDDI 80-86. Average annual cost of lost work rose from $0 among those with IBDDI 0-4 to $30,101 among those with IBDDI 80-86. Using linear regression, each additional unit of IBDDI was associated with an increase of $77 in annual medical cost (95% CI, $52-102; P < .001) and an increase of $341 in annual cost of lost wages (95% CI, $288-395; P < .001). Conclusions Costs related to IBD are significantly associated with the degree of IBD-related disability. Among the approximate 30% of the IBD population with IBDDI scores ≥40, the indirect costs of absenteeism and presenteeism accounts for ~75% of the total IBD-related costs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (28_suppl) ◽  
pp. 83-83
Author(s):  
Victor Yundeh Chiu ◽  
Jacob S. Berkowitz ◽  
Joshua Rodriguez ◽  
Jade Law ◽  
Kristina Lee ◽  
...  

83 Background: Oncologic clinical trial enrollment is low, particularly in underserved populations. Increasing enrollment of public safety-net hospital patients is important to ensure representation of the general population and reduces cancer outcome disparities. To tailor clinical trial outreach, we sought to characterize attitudes towards trial participation of oncology patients at Olive View—UCLA Medical Center (OVMC), a public safety-net hospital in Los Angeles County. Methods: We developed a 39-question survey (Qualtrics, Provo, UT). It was administered via tablets to a convenience sample of patients in OVMC’s medical oncology clinic and infusion center during 2020—2021. The survey was offered to patients fluent in English or Spanish. Results: Of 165 patients who were offered the survey, 11 declined due to illiteracy in any language, 4 did not finish the survey. Median age was 54 (range: 20-81); 63% were female. The majority (76%) reported an annual income below $25,000; 39% did not complete high school. Self-identified ethnicity was Hispanic/Latino (73%), non-Hispanic White (12%), Asian-Pacific Islander (9%), and Black (4%). Based on a 5-point Likert scale of comfort speaking English, 48% had English proficiency (EP). Overall, 69% of patients expressed interest in trials. When considering participation, patients would seek advice from their physician (86%), family (32%), other medical staff (14%), alternative medicine practitioner (7%), friend (6%), or religious leader (4%). Concerns regarding trial participation were lack of knowledge regarding trials (47%), fear of side effects (43%), frequent visits (25%), cost (20%), transportation (14%), wage loss (9%), and inability to determine own treatment (4%). Patients found the following modalities useful for learning about trials: website (43%), paper handout (39%), video (37%), discussion with prior participants (34%). Patients with annual income > $25,000 were significantly more concerned about cost (33.3% v. 15.8%, p = 0.04) and treatment side effects (61.1% v. 36.8%, p = 0.02). EP patients were more likely to find a website (54.2% vs. 32.1%, p = 0.01) or discussion with prior participants (45.8% v. 23.1%, p < 0.01) helpful compared to low EP patients. Conclusions: There is considerable interest in oncologic clinical trials in this predominantly Hispanic/Latino population. This population had significant trust in physicians for guidance on trial enrollment, and had minimal concern for out-of-pocket cost, wage loss, or transportation issues. The majority of patients did not find additional informational resources helpful. Structural barriers rather than patient-level variables are likely the primary drivers of low oncologic trial enrollment. Future efforts should focus on improving access to appropriate trials and leveraging the physician-patient relationship for increasing trial participation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 508-513
Author(s):  
Rowida Mohamed ◽  
Jayeshkumar Patel ◽  
Nazneen Fatima Shaikh ◽  
Usha Sambamoorthi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Alexandra Kis

This thesis contributes to a better understanding of the labour supply of women, and more specifically mothers, in Switzerland. It begins in Chapter 1 by highlighting the difficulties encountered by parents, and mainly women, in balancing work and family life. Women often leave the labour market or reduce their work time percentage after bearing a child. The consequences of these interruptions or reductions in the participation rate are significant on their career and its development, as well as on the wage rate. Highly-educated women are the most affected by the loss of professional skills, experience and wages. According to estimates made in Chapter 2, the wage loss caused by a career break is almost one million Swiss francs over the entire career for these women. Women should therefore care more about the continuity of their professional careers to avoid ending up in a precarious financial situation, especially in the event of a divorce or upon retirement. Chapter 3 discusses factors that can influence women's labour supply and shows that childcare services are among the most important factors. While most of the studies carried out so far agree on the negative effect of the cost of childcare services on the mothers’ labour supply, the magnitude of the effects varies considerably across studies. Chapter 4 attempts to understand why thanks to a meta-analysis. In Chapter 5, we estimate precisely how the availability and the cost of the childcare centres influence the labour supply of mothers in Switzerland. The lack of childcare slots turns out to be the major issue for mothers and influences both the decision to work and the quantity of labour. We estimate that the creation of a slot would increase the labor supply of mothers by a full-time equivalent. The cost of childcare “only” influences the quantity of work and is conditional on having a slot. An estimate of the cost for the State of increasing the supply of childcare centres shows that the additional tax revenue more than covers the cost of these new slots. It is therefore possible to reach a win-win situation for both families and the society. For the economy, the consequences of a lower participation of women in the labour market are also numerous. It implies a suboptimal use of the talent pool, a loss of productive capacity and a lower return on investment in education. It also weakens the pension and social assistance system, already undermined by an aging population. It is therefore necessary for the State to intervene by creating adequate financial and institutional conditions to ensure a better work and family life balance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bonnie Honig

In the US, quarantine requires we stay home, but many do not have homes to stay in or may lose theirs due to job or wage loss. For this reason, moratoria have been put on evictions. At the same time, after the latest police killings, and during ensuing protests against racist policing in June 2020, some were arrested for curfew violations, many pulled off the streets but others out of their homes or off their stoops. A real right to housing addresses both homelessness and uncurbed police powers that round up and break in. To address current emergencies and correct larger wrongs of American life, a rent jubilee would better protect tenants than a moratorium. It could be construed as a “taking,” allowed by the 5th Amendment, compensating landlords for their properties’ being taken to serve a “public use.” Popular takings, too, are rising up on behalf of a right to housing that goes beyond rent moratoria for some and the provision of low-grade “public housing” for others.


2020 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 100-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren E Parmley ◽  
Carly A Comins ◽  
Katherine Young ◽  
Mfezi Mcingana ◽  
Deliwe Rene Phetlhu ◽  
...  

ObjectivesWhile female sex workers (FSW) are nearly 14 times more likely to be living with HIV than non-FSW, less than 40% of FSW living with HIV are on antiretroviral therapy (ART). We sought to understand how the work environment influences ART access and adherence for FSW in preparation for the Siyaphambili trial.MethodsFSW living with HIV (n=24) and key informants (n=15) were recruited to participate in semistructured in-depth interviews using maximum variation and snowball sampling, respectively. FSW were recruited on key variants including type of sex work venue, primary work time and history of ART use. Data were collected between September and November 2017 in Durban, South Africa. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and translated. Data were then coded applying grounded theory in Atlas.ti.ResultsFSW experienced occupational barriers to adherence including work-related migration, substance use and theft of ART on the job. Fear of wage loss due to HIV disclosure to clients and brothel managers prevented some FSW from accessing ART at their clinic and taking medications while working. FSW employed coping strategies to overcome barriers including sharing ART with colleagues, carrying small supplies of ART and visiting the clinic prior to appointments for ART refills. Further, some FSW received adherence support from colleagues who were also living with HIV.ConclusionsConsidering these occupational pressures on FSW and supporting positive coping strategies are important when designing and implementing HIV treatment programmes. Findings suggest strengthening social cohesion and supporting differentiated care efforts to improve HIV outcomes among FSW living with HIV.


BMJ Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. e032678
Author(s):  
Khine Khine Thinn ◽  
Pruthu Thekkur ◽  
Nang Thu Thu Kyaw ◽  
Nyein Su Aye ◽  
Tin Maung Zaw ◽  
...  

ObjectivesIn 2017, Myanmar implemented routine viral load (VL) monitoring for assessing the response to antiretroviral therapy (ART) among people living with HIV (PLHIV). The performance of routine VL testing and implementation challenges has not yet assessed. We aimed to determine the uptake of VL testing and factors associated with it among PLHIV initiated on ART during 2017 in ART clinics of Yangon region and to explore the implementation challenges as perceived by the healthcare providers.DesignAn explanatory mixed-methods study was conducted. The quantitative component was a cohort study, and the qualitative part was a descriptive study with in-depth interviews.SettingSix ART clinics operated by AIDS/sexually transmitted infection teams under the National AIDS Programme.Primary outcome measures(1) The proportion who underwent VL testing by 30 March 2019 and the proportion with virological suppression (plasma VL <1000 copies/mL); (2) association between patient characteristics and ‘not tested’ was assessed using log binomial regression and (3) qualitative codes on implementation challenges.ResultsOf the 567 PLHIV started on ART, 498 (87.8%) retained in care for more than 6 months and were eligible for VL testing. 288 (57.8%, 95% CI: 53.3% to 62.2%) PLHIV underwent VL testing, of which 263 (91.3%, 95% CI: 87.1% to 94.4%) had virological suppression. PLHIV with WHO clinical stage 4 had significantly higher rates of ‘not being tested’ for VL. Collection of sample for VL testing only twice a month, difficulties in sample collection and transportation, limited trained workforce, wage loss and out-of-pocket expenditure for patients due to added visits were major implementation challenges.ConclusionsThe VL test uptake was low, with only six out of ten PLHIV tested. The VL testing uptake needs to be improved by strengthening sample collection and transportation, adopting point-of-care VL tests, increasing trained workforce, providing compensation to patients for wage loss and travel costs for additional visits.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document