geographic variation
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Terlizzi ◽  
Robin Cohen

This report presents state, regional, and national estimates of the percentage of people who were uninsured, had private health insurance coverage, and had public health insurance coverage at the time of the interview.


2022 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Diana M. Tordoff ◽  
Sahar Zangeneh ◽  
Christine M. Khosropour ◽  
Sara N. Glick ◽  
R. Scott McClelland ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Muñoz ◽  
David Miller ◽  
Rudolf Schilder ◽  
Evan H. Campbell Grant

2021 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-105
Author(s):  
Alexander M. Kerr ◽  
Curt G. Fiedler
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl R. Clark ◽  
Paulette D. Chandler ◽  
Guohai Zhou ◽  
Nyia Noel ◽  
Confidence Achilike ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Noblit

I aim to understand variation in an important and historically novel socio-political institution, the Chinese lineage. There is extensive geographic variation in the historical prominence and relevance of lineages. Using ethnographic and historical-economic evidence, I construct a theory explaining lineages as risk-pooling institutions, which provide lineage members with access to land. More so, variation in regional demand for risk-pooling and/or access to land likely stems from well-studied rice-wheat agroeconomicdifferences. I test this hypothesis by examining whether lineage activity is associated with landholding size, precipitation predictability, and historically documented precipitation disasters and find support for my hypothesis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Ladau ◽  
Katrina Abuabara ◽  
Angelica M. Walker ◽  
Marcin P. Joachimiak ◽  
Ishan Bansal ◽  
...  

Mortality rates during the COVID-19 pandemic have varied by orders of magnitude across communities in the United States. Individual, socioeconomic, and environmental factors have been linked to health outcomes of COVID-19. It is now widely appreciated that the environmental microbiome, composed of microbial communities associated with soil, water, atmosphere, and the built environment, impacts immune system development and susceptibility to immune-mediated disease. The human microbiome has been linked to individual COVID-19 disease outcomes, but there are limited data on the influence of the environmental microbiome on geographic variation in COVID-19 across populations. To fill this knowledge gap, we used taxonomic profiles of fungal communities associated with 1,135 homes in 494 counties from across the United States in a machine learning analysis to predict COVID-19 Infection Fatality Ratios (the number of deaths caused by COVID-19 per 1000 SARS-CoV-2 infections; 'IFR'). Here we show that exposure to increased fungal diversity, and in particular indoor exposure to outdoor fungi, is associated with reduced SARS-CoV-2 IFR. Further, we identify seven fungal genera that are the predominant drivers of this protective signal and may play a role in suppressing COVID-19 mortality. This relationship is strongest in counties where human populations have remained stable over at least the previous decade, consistent with the importance of early-life microbial exposures. We also assessed the explanatory power of 754 other environmental and socioeconomic factors, and found that indoor-outdoor fungal beta-diversity is amongst the strongest predictors of county-level IFR, on par with the most important known COVID-19 risk factors, including age. We anticipate that our study will be a starting point for further integration of environmental mycobiome data with population health information, providing an important missing link in our capacity to identify vulnerable populations. Ultimately, our identification of specific genera predicted to be protective against COVID-19 mortality may point toward novel, proactive therapeutic approaches to infectious disease.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleanor J. Junkins ◽  
Joseph E. Potter ◽  
Peter J. Rentfrow ◽  
Samuel D. Gosling ◽  
Jeff Potter ◽  
...  

Levels of fertility and the shape of the age-specific fertility schedule vary substantially across U.S. regions with some states having peak fertility relatively early and others relatively late. Structural institutions or economic factors partly explain these heterogeneous patterns, but regional differences in personality might also contribute to regional differences in fertility. Here, we evaluated whether variation in extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, and openness to experience measured at the U.S. state-level was associated with the level, timing, and context of fertility across states above and beyond sociodemographics, voting behavior, and religiosity. Generally, states with higher levels of agreeableness and conscientiousness had more traditional fertility patterns, and states with higher levels of neuroticism and openness had more nontraditional fertility patterns, even after controlling for established correlates of fertility (r ~ |.50|). Personality is an overlooked correlate that can be leveraged to understand the existence and persistence of fertility differentials.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonieta Labra ◽  
Claudio Reyes‐Olivares ◽  
Felipe N. Moreno‐Gómez ◽  
Nelson A. Velásquez ◽  
Mario Penna ◽  
...  
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