Baumbach is clearly grappling with a lot here — not just fears about getting older, but also a sense of being stuck
between multiple age groups.
Not exact matches
In a study of flu - related deaths
between 1997 and 2007, published by the American Journal of Epidemiology, a
group of researchers found that mortality was more common in men than women across
multiple age -
groups, regardless of underlying conditions.
Consistent epidemiological evidence, particularly for depression, suggests an association
between measures of diet quality and mental health, across
multiple populations and
age groups; these do not appear to be explained by other demographic, lifestyle factors or reverse causality.
More precisely the different joint conditions
grouped under the name of elbow dysplasia include: a ununited anconeal process (failure of union
between the anconeal process and the remainder of the ulna beyond 20 weeks of
age), the so - called osteochondrosis dissecans of the humeral condyle (failure of ossification of the articular cartilage covering the humeral condyle, resulting in an abnormal thickening of the articular cartilage and separation
between this region and the underlying bone), and finally the fragmentation of the coronoid process (in which the ulnar coronoid process have
multiple fragments or most often a single fragment).
Analyses comparing mothers with no participating children and mothers who had at least one participating child revealed no differences
between these two
groups in terms of race, marital status, education,
age, or number of children, but that daughters, marrieds, and those with higher education were slightly more likely to participate, consistent with other studies with
multiple generations (Kalmijn & Liefbroer, 2011; Rossi & Rossi, 1990).