[PDF] Top 20 Volume 21 - Article 18 | Pages 535–568
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Volume 21 - Article 18 | Pages 535–568
... Checking against the correspondence table ICD8/ICD9 (Table 3), the ICD8 items in question both link with ICD9 403 only, completing an association of type 1:N (see Table 4, Association [r] ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 21 | Pages 627–658
... ity of period-age surfaces by plotting a wide range of measures such as between-country mortality rate ratios, population numbers, sex ratios, fertility rates, or model residuals as shaded contours across period and age ... See full document
34
Volume 21 - Article 13 | Pages 367–384
... In model I the mortality risk ratios for birth order and preceding birth interval are in the expected direction. Births of order six or higher with short preceding birth intervals have the highest mortality risk. Infants ... See full document
20
Volume 21 - Article 26 | Pages 765–802
... Typically, the older parents in our study met each other at an older age than the young parents, and also had their first child later into the partnership. In the NKPS samples the relationships in which the first child ... See full document
40
Volume 23 - Article 21 | Pages 587–614
... was 18% for the Italian survey (personal communication with Lidia Gargiulo of Istat, E-mail: ...and 21% for the French survey (Barre and Vanderschelden 2004, page ... See full document
30
Volume 21 - Article 9 | Pages 235–254
... Migration rates are typically highest for young adults, and drop sharply in middle age. Both the GGB and SEG methodologies use information on deaths by age above some age (or series of ages). One possible approach to ... See full document
22
Volume 21 - Article 8 | Pages 215–234
... Amounting to 6.3% this indicator falls three times below the level of ever cohabitation. The indicator of ever cohabitation of 18% constitutes an average measure of cohabitation incidence in the period 1985-2006. ... See full document
22
Volume 21 - Article 15 | Pages 427–468
... Some of these limitations (e.g., selectivity of the tracing process) are inherent to socio- centric studies, but others are due to limited resources available during the LNS and were remedied during a follow-up study ... See full document
44
Volume 21 - Article 24 | Pages 719–758
... The estimated proportion of each cohort ending in marital disruption, , is presented in Table 3, in columns (3) and (4), and in Figure 4 (baseline estimate). Given that the estimation inevitably contains some error, a ... See full document
42
Volume 30 - Article 18 | Pages 535–546
... under 18 at the most recent wave before the divorce, whether there were children present that are the wife’s but not the husband’s (and vice versa) at Wave 1, his and her education at Wave 1 in years, his and her ... See full document
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Volume 35 - Article 21 | Pages 581–616
... Table 3 reports, separately by parity (zero; one or above), the percentage of daughters intending a(nother) child (upper part), and daughters’ mean intended family size (bottom part), by daughter’s and mother’s level of ... See full document
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Volume 18 - Article 19 | Pages 531–568
... Moreover, Statistics Canada and various researchers have warned that tackling the discontinuity of ICD’s sequences can be complex and needs to be approached with caution (Statistique Canada 1984; Meslé 1997). ... See full document
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Volume 18 - Article 21 | Pages 611–628
... age 18, could not be interviewed of course, so our data are subject to an element of selectivity by virtue of survival in the study population (Ryder, 1965), the way survey data always ... See full document
20
Volume 33 - Article 19 | Pages 535–560
... to 18 months before the survey). As a result there is a mismatch of 18+9 months between the timing of the measurement of the proximate determinants at the time of the survey and the ... See full document
28
Volume 21 - Article 14 | Pages 385–426
... The daily total numbers of deaths, as well as the number of deaths in selected age groups and social classes, were related to the daily average temperatures using regression models for[r] ... See full document
44
Volume 21 - Article 25 | Pages 759–764
... In the stable population, constant vital rates yield (linear) exponential growth in the number of births, while in the metastable model net maternity that increases exponentially over ag[r] ... See full document
8
Volume 21 - Article 27 | Pages 803–842
... The inclusion of the aggregate proportion of women in the labor market in one of the models provided mixed results, since the effect of the indicator for childcare availability lost it[r] ... See full document
42
Volume 21 - Article 7 | Pages 177–214
... In the Cal-QOL sample, heterosexual women in LAT relationships are much less likely to live with a minor child compared to married or cohabiting women, but in the GSS sample there are [r] ... See full document
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Volume 21 - Article 21 | Pages 627–646
... This second type of within-country inequality is the focus of this article. In the first of three main sections we use DHS data from across SSA in order to highlight the scale of within-country differences in HIV ... See full document
22
Volume 35 - Article 19 | Pages 535–556
... The gender- and union-specific single-year disability rates were combined with the single-year marital-status life tables derived from the Eurostat data to estimate the person years at[r] ... See full document
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