114 research outputs found
Summertime, and the livin is easy: Winter and summer pseudoseasonal life expectancy in the United States
In temperate climates, mortality is seasonal with a winter-dominant pattern,
due in part to pneumonia and influenza. Cardiac causes, which are the leading
cause of death in the United States, are also winter-seasonal although it is
not clear why. Interactions between circulating respiratory viruses (f.e.,
influenza) and cardiac conditions have been suggested as a cause of
winter-dominant mortality patterns. We propose and implement a way to estimate
an upper bound on mortality attributable to winter-dominant viruses like
influenza. We calculate 'pseudo-seasonal' life expectancy, dividing the year
into two six-month spans, one encompassing winter the other summer. During the
summer when the circulation of respiratory viruses is drastically reduced, life
expectancy is about one year longer. We also quantify the seasonal mortality
difference in terms of seasonal "equivalent ages" (defined herein) and
proportional hazards. We suggest that even if viruses cause excess winter
cardiac mortality, the population-level mortality reduction of a perfect
influenza vaccine would be much more modest than is often recognized
The geometry of mortality change: Convex hulls for demographic analysis
We introduce convex hulls as a data visualization and analytic tool for demography. Convex hulls are widely used in computer science, and have been applied in fields such as ecology, but are heretofore underutilized in population studies. We briefly discuss convex hulls, then we show how they may profitably be applied to demography. We do this through three examples, drawn from the relationship between child and adult mortality (5q0 and 45q15 in life table notation). The three examples are: (i) sex differences in mortality; (ii) period and cohort differences and (iii) outlier identification. Convex hulls can be useful in robust compilation of demographic databases. Moreover, the gap/lag framework for sex differences or period/cohort differences is more complex when mortality data are arrayed by two components as opposed to a unidimensional measure such as life expectancy. Our examples show how, in certain cases, convex hulls can identify patterns in demographic data more readily than other techniques. The potential applicability of convex hulls in population studies goes beyond mortality
Summertime, and the livin’ is easy: Winter and summer pseudoseasonal life expectancy in the United States
Cause of Death Affects Racial Classification on Death Certificates
Recent research suggests racial classification is responsive to social stereotypes, but how this affects racial classification in national vital statistics is unknown. This study examines whether cause of death influences racial classification on death certificates. We analyze the racial classifications from a nationally representative sample of death certificates and subsequent interviews with the decedents' next of kin and find notable discrepancies between the two racial classifications by cause of death. Cirrhosis decedents are more likely to be recorded as American Indian on their death certificates, and homicide victims are more likely to be recorded as Black; these results remain net of controls for followback survey racial classification, indicating that the relationship we reveal is not simply a restatement of the fact that these causes of death are more prevalent among certain groups. Our findings suggest that seemingly non-racial characteristics, such as cause of death, affect how people are racially perceived by others and thus shape U.S. official statistics
The transmission and persistence of ‘urban legends’: Sociological application of age‐structured epidemic models
This paper describes two related epidemic models of rumor transmission in an age-structured population. Rumors share with communicable disease certain basic aspects, which means that formal models of epidemics may be applied to the transmission of rumors. The results show that rumors may become entrenched very quickly and persist for a long time, even when skeptics are modeled to take an active role in trying to convince others that the rumor is false. This is a macrophenomeon, because individuals eventually cease to believe the rumor, but are replaced by new recruits. This replacement of former believers by new ones is an aspect of all the models, but the approach to stability is quicker, and involves smaller chance of extinction, in the model where skeptics actively try to counter the rumor, as opposed to the model where interest is naturally lost by believers. Skeptics hurt their own cause. The result shows that including age, or a variable for which age is a proxy (e.g., experience), can improve model fidelity and yield important insights
Preto no branco?: mensuração, relevância e concordância classificatória no país da incerteza racial
The Transmission and Persistence of`'Urban Legends': Sociological Application of Age-Structured Epidemic Models
This paper describes two related epidemic models of rumor transmission in an age-structured population. Rumors share with communicable disease certain basic aspects, which means that formal models of epidemics may be applied to the transmission of rumors. The results show that rumors may become entrenched very quickly and persist for a long time, even when skeptics are modeled to take an active role in trying to convince others that the rumor is false. This is a macrophenomeon, because individuals eventually cease to believe the rumor, but are replaced by new recruits. This replacement of former believers by new ones is an aspect of all the models, but the approach to stability is quicker, and involves smaller chance of extinction, in the model where skeptics actively try to counter the rumor, as opposed to the model where interest is naturally lost by believers. Skeptics hurt their own cause. The result shows that including age, or a variable for which age is a proxy (e.g. experience), can improve model _delity and yield important insights
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