854 research outputs found
Shade-Grown Coffee: Simulation and Policy Analysis for Coastal Oaxaca, Mexico
Shade-grown coffee provides a livelihood to many farmers, protects biodiversity, and creates environmental services. Many shade-coffee farmers have abandoned production in recent years, however, in response to declines in international coffee prices. This paper builds a farmer decision model under price uncertainty and uses simulation analysis of that model to examine the likely impact of various policies on abandonment of shade-coffee plantations. Using information from coastal Oaxaca, Mexico, this paper examines the role of various constraints in abandonment decisions, reveals the importance of the timing of policies, and characterizes the current situation in the study region.coffee farming, decision analysis, numerical modeling, Monte Carlo, price variability
Land Cover in a Managed Forest Ecosystem: Mexican Shade Coffee
Managed forest ecosystems—agroforestry systems in which crops such as coffee and bananas are planted side-by-side with woody perennials—are being touted as a means of safeguarding forests along with the ecological services they provide. Yet we know little about the determinants of land cover in such systems, information needed to design effective forest conservation policies. This paper presents a spatial regression analysis of land cover in a managed forest ecosystem—a shade coffee region of coastal Mexico. Using high-resolution land cover data derived from aerial photographs along with data on the geophysical and institutional characteristics of the study area, we find that plots in close proximity to urban centers are less likely to be cleared, all other things equal. This result contrasts sharply with the literature on natural forests. In addition, we find that membership in coffee-marketing cooperatives, farm size, and certain soil types are associated with forest cover, while proximity to small town centers is associated with forest clearing.deforestation, managed forest ecosystem, agroforestry, shade-grown coffee, Mexico, spatial econometrics, land cover
The Impacts of Medicaid Expansion on Rural Low-Income Adults: Lessons From the Oregon Health Insurance Experiment.
Medicaid expansions through the Affordable Care Act began in January 2014, but we have little information about what is happening in rural areas where provider access and patient resources might be more limited. In 2008, Oregon held a lottery for restricted access to its Medicaid program for uninsured low-income adults not otherwise eligible for public coverage. The Oregon Health Insurance Experiment used this opportunity to conduct the first randomized controlled study of a public insurance expansion. This analysis builds off of previous work by comparing rural and urban survey outcomes and adds qualitative interviews with 86 rural study participants for context. We examine health care access and use, personal finances, and self-reported health. While urban and rural populations have unique demographic profiles, rural populations appear to have benefited from Medicaid as much as urban. Qualitative interviews revealed the distinctive challenges still facing low-income uninsured and newly insured rural populations
Extending Postpartum Medicaid: State and Federal Policy Options During and After COVID-19
The United States is facing a maternal health crisis with rising rates of maternal mortality and morbidity and stark disparities in maternal outcomes by race and socioeconomic status. Among the efforts to address this issue, one policy proposal is gaining particular traction: extending the period of Medicaid eligibility for pregnant women beyond 60 days after childbirth. The authors examine the legislative and regulatory pathways most readily available for extending postpartum Medicaid, including their relative political, economic, and public health trade-offs. They also review the state and federal policy activity to date and discuss the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the prospects for policy change
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14C-Cobalamin Absorption from Endogenously Labeled Chicken Eggs Assessed in Humans Using Accelerator Mass Spectrometry.
Traditionally, the bioavailability of vitamin B-12 (B12) from in vivo labeled foods was determined by labeling the vitamin with radiocobalt (57Co, 58Co or 60Co). This required use of penetrating radioactivity and sometimes used higher doses of B12 than the physiological limit of B12 absorption. The aim of this study was to determine the bioavailability and absorbed B12 from chicken eggs endogenously labeled with 14C-B12 using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). 14C-B12 was injected intramuscularly into hens to produce eggs enriched in vivo with the 14C labeled vitamin. The eggs, which provided 1.4 to 2.6 μg of B12 (~1.1 kBq) per serving, were scrambled, cooked and fed to 10 human volunteers. Baseline and post-ingestion blood, urine and stool samples were collected over a one-week period and assessed for 14C-B12 content using AMS. Bioavailability ranged from 13.2 to 57.7% (mean 30.2 ± 16.4%). Difference among subjects was explained by dose of B12, with percent bioavailability from 2.6 μg only half that from 1.4 μg. The total amount of B12 absorbed was limited to 0.5-0.8 μg (mean 0.55 ± 0.19 μg B12) and was relatively unaffected by the amount consumed. The use of 14C-B12 offers the only currently available method for quantifying B12 absorption in humans, including food cobalamin absorption. An egg is confirmed as a good source of B12, supplying approximately 20% of the average adult daily requirement (RDA for adults = 2.4 μg/day)
The Effect Of Medicaid On Medication Use Among Poor Adults: Evidence From Oregon.
Oregon\u27s 2008 Medicaid expansion significantly increased the use of prescription medications in 2009-10
Abaloparatide, a PTH receptor agonist with homology to PTHrP, enhances callus bridging and biomechanical properties in rats with femoral fracture
Fractures typically heal via endochondral and intramembranous bone formation, which together form a callus that achieves union and biomechanical recovery. PTHrP, a PTH receptor agonist, plays an important physiological role in fracture healing as an endogenous stimulator of endochondral and intramembranous bone formation. Abaloparatide, a novel systemically‐administered osteoanabolic PTH receptor agonist that reduces fracture risk in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis, has 76% homology to PTHrP, suggesting it may have potential to improve fracture healing. To test this hypothesis, ninety‐six 12‐week‐old male rats underwent unilateral internally‐stabilized closed mid‐diaphyseal femoral fractures and were treated starting the next day with daily s.c. saline (Vehicle) or abaloparatide at 5 or 20 µg/kg/d for 4 or 6 weeks (16 rats/group/time point). Histomorphometry and histology analyses indicated that fracture calluses from the abaloparatide groups exhibited significantly greater total area, higher fluorescence scores indicating more newly‐formed bone, and higher fracture bridging scores versus Vehicle controls. Callus bridging score best correlated with callus cartilage score (r = 0.64) and fluorescence score (r = 0.67) at week 4, and callus area correlated with cartilage score (r = 0.60) and fluorescence score (r = 0.89) at Week 6. By micro‐CT, calluses from one or both abaloparatide groups had greater bone volume, bone volume fraction, bone mineral content, bone mineral density, and cross‐sectional area at both time points versus Vehicle controls. Destructive bending tests indicated greater callus maximum load and stiffness in one or both abaloparatide groups at both time points versus Vehicle controls. These results provide preliminary preclinical evidence for improved fracture healing with systemically‐administered abaloparatide. © 2019 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop ResPeer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/149317/1/jor24254_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/149317/2/jor24254.pd
The Effect of Medicaid on Dental Care of Poor Adults: Evidence from the Oregon Health Insurance Experiment.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of Medicaid coverage on dental care outcomes, a major health concern for low-income populations.
DATA SOURCES: Primary and secondary data on health care use and outcomes for participants in Oregon\u27s 2008 Medicaid lottery.
STUDY DESIGN: We used the lottery\u27s random selection to gauge the causal effects of Medicaid on dental care needs, medication, and emergency department visits for dental care.
DATA COLLECTION: Data were collected for lottery participants over 2 years, including mail surveys (N = 23,777) and in-person questionnaires (N = 12,229). Emergency department (ED) records were matched to lottery participants in Portland (N = 24,646).
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Medicaid coverage significantly reduced the share of respondents who reported needing dental care (-9.8 percentage points, p \u3c .001) or having unmet dental care needs (-13.5 percentage points, p \u3c 0.001). Medicaid doubled the share visiting the ED for dental care (+2.6 percentage points, p = .003) and the use of anti-infective medications often prescribed for dental care, but it had no detectable effect on uncovered dental care or out-of-pocket spending.
CONCLUSIONS: Expansion of Medicaid covering emergency dental care substantially reduced unmet need for dental care, increasing ED dental visits and medication use, while not changing patient use of uncovered dental services
The Health Effects Of Expanding The Earned Income Tax Credit: Results From New York City.
Antipoverty policies may hold promise as tools to improve health and reduce mortality rates among low-income Americans. We examined the health effects of the New York City Paycheck Plus randomized controlled trial. Paycheck Plus tests the impact of a potential fourfold increase in the Earned Income Tax Credit for low-income Americans without dependent children. Starting in 2015, Paycheck Plus offered 5,968 study participants a credit of up to 500 (control). Health-related quality of life and other outcomes for a representative subset of these participants (n = 3,289) were compared to those of a control group thirty-two months after randomization. The intervention had a modest positive effect on employment and earnings, particularly among women. It had no effect on health-related quality of life for the overall sample, but women realized significant improvements
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