Not exact matches
Earlier research has found that your zip code is one
of the strongest indicators
of your health, and that regions with more economic inequality have higher
rates of chronic illness and
worse medical
outcomes.
As Dan Mangan reports for CNBC, «despite spending well in excess
of the
rate of any other
of those countries in 2013, the United States achieved
worse outcomes when it comes to
rates of chronic conditions, obesity and infant mortality.»
The Third Way found a long - term decline in the earnings
of low - skill males and that declining wages coincided with increased
rates of family disruption and
worse educational
outcomes for boys from these disrupted families.
As a follow up to that, if McCulloch was suggesting that there were not -
bad homebirth
outcomes wrongly attributed to hospital, how many
of those births would have to be added to the homebirth group to actually make a difference in lessening the apparent stillbirth
rate?
The U.S. cesarean
rate is about twice that
of Europe - the majority are not medically justified according to maternal health experts - with significantly
worse outcomes.
The reason insurance
rates are high is because the risk
of a
bad outcome leading to a large payout is high.
And a higher
rate of Homebirth moms say «I understood the normalcy
of birth and took care
of myself and had a positive outlook», and had a
bad outcome than hospital birth moms.
Having a Homebirth doesn't guarantee you a
bad outcome, you just have a higher
rate of having a
bad outcome.
(
Of course, they also need to consider the infant mortality,
bad outcomes and hospital transfer
rates as well).
And this inflammatory use
of a «relative percentage risk» rather than relative risk or absolute risk... for example, even if assuming the writer's awkward data is valid, you can to look at infant living
rates and see 99.6 % vs 98.4 %, which means there's only a 1.2 % higher risk
of bad outcome from at - home birth than hospital.
Patients who didn't seek follow - up care within a month received the lowest
rate of care and had the
worst health
outcomes — demonstrating the need to improve follow - up with high risk chest pain patients after they're discharged from the emergency room, Ko said.
While late - term gestation was associated with an increase in the
rate of abnormal conditions at birth and with
worse physical
outcomes during childhood, it was also associated with better performance on all three measures
of school - based cognitive functioning measures during childhood,» the study concludes.
Women over the age
of 65 face numerous barriers to good health: an increased risk for obesity, greater struggles against poverty and higher
rates of asthma with
worse health
outcomes.
«Emergency department crowding is clearly linked to
worse patient care and
worse outcomes, including higher mortality
rates, higher
rates of complications, and errors,» said Jesse M. Pines, M.B.A., M.D., director
of the Office for Clinical Practice Innovation, professor
of emergency medicine and health policy at the GW School
of Medicine and Health Sciences.
Anthropogenic CO2 emissions are presently increasing every year at an accelerating
rate, and it is extremely unlikely that humanity will collectively do what is necessary to not only stop that growth in CO2 emissions, but reverse it, and then reduce emissions by 80 percent or more within 5 to 10 years, which is what mainstream climate scientists say is needed to avoid the
worst outcomes of anthropogenic global warming.
When states reduce funding for institutions with lower
outcomes, such as graduation
rates, without taking student race / ethnicity or income into account, this often means they are defunding institutions with more low - income students and students
of color, making matters
worse.
Because
of their increased dropout
rate, as well as societal stigma surrounding them and a number
of other factors, teenage parents and their children are at risk
of experiencing
worse psychosocial and socioeconomic
outcomes than their peers (Kiselica & Pfaller, 1993; Coren et al., 2003).
Rates of heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and other noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) in low - and middle - income countries are increasing faster, in younger people, and with
worse outcomes than in wealt...
In a pair
of analyses based on NSCAW, Cecilia Casaneueva and colleagues showed that about one - third
of parents with low parenting skills had experienced domestic violence.24 Such violence was also associated with harsher parenting: children over the age
of eighteen months were more likely to be spanked if their parents were facing domestic violence.25 But parents who had once experienced domestic violence, but had been able to put it behind them, did not show elevated
rates of impaired or violent parenting.26 The parenting
of women currently suffering interpersonal partner violence is significantly
worse than that
of women who have faced it in the past, suggesting that the context
of the violence is creating the problems in parenting and child conduct problems and that its cessation may be a more important contributor to child
outcomes than parent instruction.
Results Probands had significantly
worse educational, occupational, economic, and social
outcomes; more divorces; and higher
rates of ongoing ADHD (22.2 % vs 5.1 %, P <.001), ASPD (16.3 % vs 0 %, P <.001), and SUDs (14.1 % vs 5.1 %, P =.01) but not more mood or anxiety disorders (P =.36 and.33) than did comparison participants.
Youth with co-occurring ADHD and depression experience more serious impairments and
worse developmental
outcomes than those with either disorder alone, including increased
rates of suicidal ideation and suicide completion.