785 research outputs found

    Understanding Socioeconomic Disparities in Stroke: an international perspective

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    The aim of the thesis was to examine the magnitude and explanation of socioeconomic differences in stroke across different world populations. Data from several sources were used including mortality statistics merged with national census data, population cohort studies and general practice registration data. Results indicate that socioeconomic status is associated with higher stroke mortality in many Western populations. Whereas socioeconomic disparities in stroke mortality are similar across Western Europe, there i

    Genetic heterogeneity of residual variance in broiler chickens

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    Aims were to estimate the extent of genetic heterogeneity in environmental variance. Data comprised 99 535 records of 35-day body weights from broiler chickens reared in a controlled environment. Residual variance within dam families was estimated using ASREML, after fitting fixed effects such as genetic groups and hatches, for each of 377 genetically contemporary sires with a large number of progeny (>>100 males or females each). Residual variance was computed separately for male and female offspring, and after correction for sampling, strong evidence for heterogeneity was found, the standard deviation between sires in within variance amounting to 15–18% of its mean. Reanalysis using log-transformed data gave similar results, and elimination of 2–3% of outlier data reduced the heterogeneity but it was still over 10%. The correlation between estimates for males and females was low, however. The correlation between sire effects on progeny mean and residual variance for body weight was small and negative (-0.1). Using a data set bigger than any yet presented and on a trait measurable in both sexes, this study has shown evidence for heterogeneity in the residual variance, which could not be explained by segregation of major genes unless very few determined the trait

    Does the transition to grandparenthood influence the health and well-being of older people? Evidence from the CHARLS study in China.

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    •Transitioning to grandmotherhood was associated with a higher probability of reporting ≥1 functional limitations in ADLs.•Transitioning to grandparenthood was associated with higher life satisfaction.•Role enhancement and role strain may generate mixed impacts of transitioning to grandparenthood on older adults' health

    Should I Care or Should I Work? The Impact of Work on Informal Care

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    This paper provides novel evidence on how a sharp increase in labor force participation among older women affects the provision of informal care to their older parents. Based on data from Understanding Society – The UK Household Longitudinal Study, we use an instrumental variable approach that exploits a unique reform that increased the female State Pension age by up to six years. Our results provide evidence of a trade-off between the intensive margin of work and informal care provided outside the household: an increase of 10 hours of work per week reduces the provision of informal care by 2.1 hours a week, which amounts to roughly £2,100 of yearly care-hours lost. This reduction in caregiving is largest among women working in physically or psychosocially demanding jobs, and “sandwich generation” women who have both a living grandchild and a parent alive. Using data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, we show that older parents whose daughters became ineligible to claim their pensions experienced a significant reduction in the amount of care they receive from their daughters, which was not compensated by an increase in formal care or other sources of support. Our results suggest that policies that increase older workers’ labor supply require changes in long-term care policy that compensate for the loss of informal care

    Later retirement, job strain, and health: Evidence from the new State Pension age in the United Kingdom

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    This paper examines the impact of raising the State Pension age on women's health. Exploiting a UK pension reform that increased women's State Pension age for up to 6 years since 2010, we show that raising the State Pension age leads to an increase of up to 12 percentage points in the probability of depressive symptoms, alongside an increase in self-reported medically diagnosed depression among women in a lower occupational grade. Our results suggest that these effects are driven by prolonged exposure to high-strain jobs characterised by high demands and low control. Effects are consistent across multiple subcomponents of the General Health Question and Short-Form-12 (SF-12) scores, and robust to alternative empirical specifications, including “placebo” analyses for women who never worked and for men

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    We thank Blakely et al. (1) for their observations. We welcome their stance that researchers conducting instrumental variable (IV)–fixed-effects (FE) analysis should be wary of potential violations of the exclusion restriction—in our study (2), the assumption that eligibility for the free bus pass only impacts cognitive function through the effect on public transportation use. The exclusion restriction is essentially untestable and must be supported by strong arguments. We argue that Blakely et al.’s concerns do not offer convincing evidence to conclude that the difference in magnitude between our FE estimates and our IV-FE estimates is due to an exclusion restriction violation
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