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Fenelon participates in Capitol Hill briefing
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Population Reference Bureau event "Grave Consequences: Why Some Americans Are No Longer Living Longer"
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News
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Fernando Riosmena, University of Colorado at Boulder
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Climate migration across contexts, gender, and the life course: an examination in contemporary Mexico
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Coming Up
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Financial strain and ideal cardiovascular health in middle-aged and older women: Data from the Women's health study
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Financial strain is a prevalent form of psychosocial stress in the United States; however, information about the relationship between financial strain and cardiovascular health remains sparse, particularly in older women. The cross-sectional association between financial strain and ideal cardiovascular health were examined in the Women's Health Study follow-up cohort (N = 22,048; mean age = 72± 6.0 years).Six self-reported measures of financial strain were summed together to create a financial strain index and categorized into 4 groups: No financial strain, 1 stressor, 2 stressors, and 3+ stressors. Ideal cardiovascular health was based on the American Heart Association strategic 2020 goals metric, including tobacco use, body mass index, physical activity, diet, blood pressure, total cholesterol and diabetes mellitus. Cardiovascular health was examined as continuous and a categorical outcome (ideal, intermediate, and poor). Statistical analyses adjusted for age, race/ethnicity, education and income. At least one indicator of financial strain was reported by 16% of participants. Number of financial stressors was associated with lower ideal cardiovascular health, and this association persisted after adjustment for potential confounders (1 financial stressor (FS): B = −0.10, 95% Confidence Intervals (CI) = −0.13, −0.07; 2 FS: B = −0.20, 95% CI = −0.26, −0.15; 3+ FS: B = −0.44, 95% CI = −0.50, −0.38). Financial strain was associated with lower ideal cardiovascular health in middle aged and older female health professional women. The results of this study have implications for the potential cardiovascular health benefit of financial protections for older individuals.
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Retired Persons
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Natalie Slopen, Sc.D.
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Natalie Slopen Publications
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Flies Without Borders - Lessons from Chennai on Improving India's Municipal Public Health Services
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India’s cities face key challenges to improving public health outcomes. First, unequally distributed public resources create insanitary conditions, especially in slums – threatening everyone’s health, as suggested by poor child growth even amongst the wealthiest. Second, devolving services to elected bodies works poorly for highly technical services like public health. Third, services are highly fragmented. This paper examines the differences in the organisation and management of municipal services in Chennai and Delhi, two cities with sharply contrasting health indicators. Chennai mitigates these challenges by retaining professional management of service delivery and actively serving vulnerable populations − while services in Delhi are quite constrained. Management and institutional issues have received inadequate attention in the public health literature on developing countries, and the policy lessons from Chennai have wide relevance.
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MPRC People
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Monica Das Gupta, Ph.D.
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Monica Das Gupta Publications
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Flies Without Borders: Lessons from Chennai on improving India’s municipal public health services
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Monica Das Gupta, University of Maryland, et al. // Keywords: Public health, Sanitation, Urban, Local government, India, Governance, Devolution; 2017-005
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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Florencia Torche, Stanford University
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The COVID-19 Pandemic and Infant Health: A Population-Level Analysis
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Coming Up
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For Young Women in Sub-Saharan Africa Addressing Transactional Sex May be Key to Reducing HIV Infections
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Transactional Sex and HIV Risk: From Analysis to Action
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Research
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Selected Research
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Francesco Billari, Bocconi University
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Demography: Fast and Slow
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Coming Up
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Frauke Kreuter featured in The Baltimore Sun on New Data Collection on COVID-19 with Facebook
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Faculty at the University of Maryland have been working with Facebook to design a worldwide survey aimed at collecting coronavirus data during the global pandemic.
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News
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Gaming in Air Pollution Data? Lessons from China
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Ginger Zhe Jin, University of Maryland, et al.; 2013-011
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents