645 research outputs found

    Population trends in China and India (A Review)

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    Use of Annual Phosphorus Loss Estimator (APLE) Model to Evaluate a Phosphorus Index

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    The Phosphorus (P) Index was developed to provide a relative ranking of agricultural fields according to their potential for P loss to surface water. Recent efforts have focused on updating and evaluating P Indices against measured or modeled P loss data to ensure agreement in magnitude and direction. Following a recently published method, we modified the Maryland P Site Index (MD-PSI) from a multiplicative to a component index structure and evaluated the MD-PSI outputs against P loss data estimated by the Annual P Loss Estimator (APLE) model, a validated, field-scale, annual P loss model. We created a theoretical dataset of fields to represent Maryland conditions and scenarios and created an empirical dataset of soil samples and management characteristics from across the state. Through the evaluation process, we modified a number of variables within the MD-PSI and calculated weighting coefficients for each P loss component. We have demonstrated that our methods can be used to modify a P Index and increase correlation between P Index output and modeled P loss data. The methods presented here can be easily applied in other states where there is motivation to update an existing P Index

    The Decline of Remarriage: Evidence From German Village Populations in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries

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    Family reconstitution data for fourteen German village populations permit the examination of remarriage during the eighteenth and nineteenth cen turies. The results provide compelling evidence for a secular decline in the tenden cy to remarry. Pronounced age and sex differentials in the likelihood of remar riage were evident: widows were far less likely to remarry than widowers, and the probability of remarriage declined rapidly with age, particularly for women. The probability of remarriage was also inversely associated with the number and age of children. There were, however, no clear differences in either the probability of remarriage or its tendency to decline over time among major occupational groups. The decline in remarriage probabilities was caused in part by declines in adult mortality, which gradually raised the ages of surviving spouses to levels at which remarriage has historically been rather unlikely. However, age-specific marriage probabilities also declined, affecting both men and women and all oc cupational groups, suggesting the presence of a social change of wide scope. Some comments on possible factors contributing to the decline of remarriage are presented. The need for a comprehensive explanation of remarriage trends and differentials remains an important challenge for family historians.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68212/2/10.1177_036319908501000103.pd

    Iron, silicate, and light co-limitation of three Southern Ocean diatom species

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    The effect of combined iron, silicate, and light co-limitation was investigated in the three diatom species Actinocyclus sp. Ehrenberg, Chaetoceros dichaeta Ehrenberg, and Chaetoceros debilis Cleve, isolated from the Southern Ocean (SO). Growth of all species was co-limited by iron and silicate, reflected in a significant increase in the number of cell divisions compared to the control. Lowest relative Si uptake and drastic frustule malformation was found under iron and silicate co-limitation in C. dichaeta, while Si limitation in general caused cell elongation in both Chaetoceros species. Higher light intensities similar to SO surface conditions showed a negative impact on growth of C. dichaeta and Actinocyclus sp. and no effect on C. debilis. This is in contrast to the assumed light limitation of SO diatoms due to deep wind driven mixing. Our results suggest that growth and species composition of Southern Ocean diatoms is influenced by a sensitive interaction of the abiotic factors, iron, silicate, and light

    Cohabitation : the Pan-America View

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    In this concluding chapter we reflect on a series of issues of both a methodological and substantive nature encountered in this research project. Firstly, we must realize that the use of individual census records not only opened vast possibilities, but also entails a number of limitations. Secondly, the very large sample sizes allowed for the disaggregation of national trends into far more detailed spatial, ethnic and educational patterns. This, in its turn, allowed us to adopt a "geo-historical" view of the rise of cohabitation for almost the entire American continent, from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego. Furthermore, statistical analyses could be performed at the individual and contextual levels simultaneously. Results show that the effects of social stratification, religion and ethnicity are continuing to be of major importance. This not only holds at the individual level, but at the contextual level as well. Nevertheless, an entirely new wave of change started rolling over the pre-existing patterns from the 1970s onward. These trends are following a firm course, irrespective of the economic ups and downs. The Americas, as opposed to many Asian societies and Africa, are now following in the European footsteps, be it with their own distinct and path-dependent characteristics associated with regionally varying historical antecedents

    Pricing reverse mortgages in Spain

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    [EN] In Spain, as in other European countries, the continuous ageing of the population creates a need for long-term care services and their financing. However, in Spain the development of this kind of services is still embryonic. The aim of this article is to obtain a calculation method for reverse mortgages in Spain based on the fit and projection of dynamic tables for Spanish mortality, using the Lee and Carter model. Mortality and life expectancy for the next 20 years are predicted using the fitted model, and confidence intervals are obtained from the prediction errors of parameters for the mortality index of the model. The last part of the article illustrates an application of the results to calculate the reverse mortgage model promoted by the Spanish Instituto de Crédito Oficial (Spanish State Financial Agency), for which the authors have developed a computer application.The authors are indebted to Jose Garrido, whose suggestions improved the original manuscript, and to the anonymous referee for his/her valuable comments. This work was partially supported by grants from the MEyC (Ministerio de Educacio´n y Ciencia, Spain), projects MTM2010- 14961 and MTM2008-05152.Debón Aucejo, AM.; Montes, F.; Sala, R. (2013). Pricing reverse mortgages in Spain. European Actuarial Journal. 3:23-43. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13385-013-0071-yS23433Blay-Berrueta D (2007) Sistemas de cofinaciaciación de la dependencia: seguro privado frente a hipoteca inversa. Cuadernos de la Fundación, Fundación Mapfre Estudios, Madrid.Booth H (2006) Demographic forecasting: 1980 to 2005 in review. Int J Forecast 22(3):547–582Booth H, Hyndman R, Tickle L, de Jong P (2006) Lee–Carter mortality forecasting: a multi-country comparison of variants and extensions. Demogr Res 15(9):289–310Booth H, Maindonald J, Smith L (2002) Applying Lee–Carter under conditions of variable mortality decline. Popul Stud 56(3):325–336Booth H, Tickle L (2003) The future aged: new projections of Australia’s ederly population. Popul Stud 22(4):38–44Brouhns N, Denuit M, Keilegom IV (2005) Bootstrapping Poisson log-bilinear model for mortality forecasting. Scand Actuar J 2005(3):212–224Brouhns N, Denuit M, Vermunt J (2002) A Poisson log-bilinear regression approach to the construction of projected lifetables. Insur Math Econ 31(3):373–393Carter L, Lee R (1992) Modeling and forecasting US sex differentials in mortality. Int J Forecast 8(3):393–411Carter L, Prkawetz A (2001) Examining structural shifs in mortality using the Lee–Carter method. Mpidr wp 2001–2007, Center for Demography and Ecology Information, University of Wisconsin-Madison.Chinloy P, Megbolugbe I (1994) Reverse mortgages: contracting and crossover. J Am Real Estate Urban Econ Assoc 22(2):367–386Coale A, Guo G (1989) Revisited regional model life tables at very low levels of mortality. Popul Index 55:613–643Coale A, Kisker E (1990) Defects in data old age mortality in the United States: New procedures for calculating approximately accurate mortality schedules and lifes tables at the highest ages. Asian Pac Popul Forum 4:1–31Cossette H, Delwarde A, Denuit M, Guillot F, Étienne M (2007) Pension plan valuation and mortality projection: a case study with mortality data. N Am Actuar J 11(2):1–34.Costa-Font J (2009) Ageing in place? exploring elderly people’s housing preferences in Spain. Urban Stud 46(2):295–316Costa-Font J (2013) Housing-related well-being in older people: the impact of environmental and financial influences. Urban Stud 50(4):657–673Currie I, Kirkby J, Durban M, Eilers P (2004) Smooth Lee–Carter models and beyond. In: Workshop on Lee–Carter Methods, http://www.ma.hw.ac.uk/~iain/workshop/workshop.html . Accessed 4 Mar 2005Czado C, Delwarde A, Denuit M (2005) Bayesian Poisson log-bilinear mortality projections. Insur Math Econ 36(3):260–284D’Amato V, Haberman S, Piscopo G, Russolillo M (2012) Modelling dependent data for longevity projections. Insur Math Econ 51(3):694–701Davidoff T (2012) Can ‘high costs’ justify weak demand for the home equity conversion mortgage? Technical report, available at SSRNDavidoff T, Welke G (2007) Selection and moral hazard in the reverse mortgage market. Technical report, Haas School of Business, UC BerkeleyDebón A, Montes F, Mateu J, Porcu E, Bevilacqua M (2008) Modelling residuals dependence in dymanic life tables. Comput Stat Data Anal 52(3):3128–3147Debón A, Montes F, Puig F (2008) Modelling and forecasting mortality in Spain. Eur J Oper Res 189(3):624–637Debón A, Montes F, Sala R (2009) Tablas de mortalidad dinámicas. Una aplicación a la hipoteca inversa en España. Fundación ICO. Publicaciones de la Universitat de Valéncia, ValenciaDebón A, Montes F, Martínez-Ruiz F (2011) Statistical methods to compare mortality for a group with non-divergent populations: an application to Spanish regions. Eur Actuar J 1:291–308Delwarde A, Denuit M, Eilers P (2007) Smoothing the Lee–Carter and poisson log-bilinear models for mortality forecasting: a penalized log-likelihood approach. Stat Modell 7(1):29–48Denuit M (2007) Distribution of the random future life expectancies in log-bilinear mortality projections models. Lifetime Data Anal 13(3):381–397Denuit M, Goderniaux A (2004) Closing and projecting lifetables using log-linear models. Mitteilungen. der Schweizerischen Aktuarvereingung 1:29–49Felipe A, Guillén M, Pérez-Marín A (2002) Recent mortality trends in the Spanish population. Br Actuar J 8(4):757–786.Forfar D, McCutcheon J, Wilkie A (1988) On graduation by mathematical formula. J Inst Actuar 115(459):1–149Guillen M, Vidiella-i-Anguera A (2005) Forecasting Spanish natural life expectancy. Risk Anal 25(5):1161–1170Heligman L, Pollard J (1980) The age pattern of mortality. J Inst Actuar 107:49–80Herranz-Gonzalez R (2006) Hipoteca inversa y figuras afines. Informes Portal Mayores 49, IMSERSO, Madrid, http://www.imsersomayores.csic.es/documentos/documentos/herranz-hipoteca-01.pdfHoriuchi S, Wilmoth J (1998) Decelaration in the age pattern of mortality at older ages. Demography 35:391–412Hyndman RJ (2008) Forecast: forecasting functions for time series. R package version 1.11Koissi M, Shapiro A, Hgns G (2006) Evaluating and extending the Lee–Carter model for mortality forecasting confidence interval. Insur Math Econ 38(1):1–20Kutty N (1998) The scope for poverty alleviation among elderly home-owners in the United States through reverse mortgages. Urban Stud 35(1):113–129Lee R (2000) The Lee–Carter method for forecasting mortality, with various extensions and applications. N Am Actuar J 4(1):80–91Lee R, Carter L (1992) Modelling and forecasting US mortality. J Am Stat Assoc 87(419):659–671Lee R, Nault F (1993) Modeling and forecasting provincial mortality in Canada. Montreal world congress of the International Union for Scientific Study of PopulationLee R, Rofman R (1994) Modelación y Proyección de la mortalidad en Chile. Notas Poblacin 22(59):182–213Li N, Lee R (2005) Coherent mortality forecast for a group of populations: an extension of the Lee–Carter method. Demography 42(3):575–593Li S-H, Hardy M, Tan K (2009) Uncertainty in mortality forecasting: an extensin to the classical Lee–Carter approach. Astin Bull 31:137–164Lindbergson M (2001) Mortality among the elderly in Sweden. Scan Actuar J 1:79–94Liu X, Braun WJ (2010) Investigating mortality uncertainty using the block bootstrap. J Probab Stat 2010:385–399McNown R, Rogers A (1989) Forecasting mortality: a parametrized time series aproach. Demography 26(4):645–660McNown R, Rogers A (1992) Forecasting cause-specific mortality using time series methods. Int J Forecast 8(3):413–432Miceli T, Sirmans C (1994) Reverse mortgages and borrower maintenance risk. J Am Real Estate Urban Econ Assoc 22(2):433–450Pedroza C (2006) A bayesian forecasting model: predicting US male mortality. Biostatistics 7(4):530–550Renshaw A, Haberman S (2003) Lee–Carter mortality forecasting: a parallel generalized linear modelling aproach for England and Wales mortality projections. J R Stat Soc C 52(1):119–137Renshaw A, Haberman S (2003) Lee–Carter mortality forecasting with age specific enhancement. Insur Math Econ 33(2):255–272Renshaw A, Haberman S (2003) On the forecasting of mortality reduction factors. 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    Wintertime phytoplankton bloom in the subarctic Pacific supported by continental margin iron

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Global Biogeochemical Cycles 20 (2006): GB1006, doi:10.1029/2005GB002557.Heightened biological activity was observed in February 1996 in the high-nutrient low-chlorophyll (HNLC) subarctic North Pacific Ocean, a region that is thought to be iron-limited. Here we provide evidence supporting the hypothesis that Ocean Station Papa (OSP) in the subarctic Pacific received a lateral supply of particulate iron from the continental margin off the Aleutian Islands in the winter, coincident with the observed biological bloom. Synchrotron X-ray analysis was used to describe the physical form, chemistry, and depth distributions of iron in size fractionated particulate matter samples. The analysis reveals that discrete micron-sized iron-rich hot spots are ubiquitous in the upper 200 m at OSP, more than 900 km from the closest coast. The specifics of the chemistry and depth profiles of the Fe hot spots trace them to the continental margins. We thus hypothesize that iron hot spots are a marker for the delivery of iron from the continental margin. We confirm the delivery of continental margin iron to the open ocean using an ocean general circulation model with an iron-like tracer source at the continental margin. We suggest that iron from the continental margin stimulated a wintertime phytoplankton bloom, partially relieving the HNLC condition.This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research (KP1202030) to J. K. B and by NSFATM-9987457 to I. F. The Advanced Light Source is supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences of the U.S. Department of Energy at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory under contract DE-AC03-76SF00098

    Burden of disease in Thailand: changes in health gap between 1999 and 2004

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Continuing comprehensive assessment of population health gap is essential for effective health planning. This paper assessed changes in the magnitude and pattern of disease burden in Thailand between 1999 and 2004. It further drew lessons learned from applying the global burden of disease (GBD) methods to the Thai context for other developing country settings.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Multiple sources of mortality and morbidity data for both years were assessed and used to estimate Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) loss for 110 specific diseases and conditions relevant to the country's health problems. Causes of death from national vital registration were adjusted for misclassification from a verbal autopsy study.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Between 1999 and 2004, DALYs loss per 1,000 population in 2004 slightly decreased in men but a minor increase in women was observed. HIV/AIDS maintained the highest burden for men in both 1999 and 2004 while in 2004, stroke took over the 1999 first rank of HIV/AIDS in women. Among the top twenty diseases, there was a slight increase of the proportion of non-communicable diseases and two out of three infectious diseases revealed a decrease burden except for lower respiratory tract infections.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The study highlights unique pattern of disease burden in Thailand whereby epidemiological transition have occurred as non-communicable diseases were on the rise but burden from HIV/AIDS resulting from the epidemic in the 1990s remains high and injuries show negligent change. Lessons point that assessing DALY over time critically requires continuing improvement in data sources particularly on cause of death statistics, institutional capacity and long term commitments.</p

    Different sex ratios of children born to Indian and Pakistani immigrants in Norway

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A low female-to-male ratio has been observed in different Asian countries, but this phenomenon has not been well studied among immigrants living in Western societies. In this study, we investigated whether a low female-to-male ratio exists among Indian and Pakistani immigrants living in Norway. In particular, we investigated whether the determination of sex via ultrasound examination, a common obstetric procedure that has been used in Norway since the early 1980 s, has influenced the female-to-male ratio among children born to parents of Indian or Pakistani origin.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We performed a retrospective cohort study of live births in mothers of Indian (n = 1597) and Pakistani (n = 5617) origin. Data were obtained from "Statistics Norway" and the female-to-male (F/M) sex ratio was evaluated among 21,325 children born, in increasing birth order, during three stratified periods (i.e., 1969-1986, 1987-1996, and 1997-2005).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A significant low female-to-male sex ratio was observed among children in the third and fourth birth order (sex ratio 65; 95% CI 51-80) from mothers of Indian origin who gave birth after 1987. Sex ratios did not deviate from the expected natural variation in the Indian cohort from 1969 to 1986, and remained stable in the Pakistani cohort during the entire study period. However, the female-to-male sex ratio seemed less skewed in recent years (i.e., 1997-2005).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Significant differences were observed in the sex ratio of children born to mothers of Indian origin compared with children born to mothers of Pakistani origin. A skewed number of female births among higher birth orders (i.e., third or later) may partly reflect an increase in sex-selective abortion among mothers of Indian origin, although the numbers are too small to draw firm conclusions. Further research is needed to explain the observed differences in the female-to-male ratio among members of these ethnic groups who reside in Norway.</p
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