497 Search Results Found For : "Low-priced"



Work-Family Policies and Child Well-Being

(2011) American families have changed dramatically in recent years. More children are living with single parents and more mothers are working. As a result, stay-at-home mothers, once the norm, have become increasingly rare.

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Q&A With Patricia Foxen

Dr. Foxen discusses the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on Latino communities, why life expectancy for Latinos is expected to drop by three years, and the challenges in collecting and tracking national and state COVID-19 data by race and ethnicity.

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Children’s Environmental Health: Risks and Remedies

(2002) Overall child mortality declined significantly in the 1990s, but environmental hazards still kill at least 3 million children under age 5 every year.1 Such young children make up roughly 10 percent of the world's population, but comprise more than 40 percent of the population suffering from health problems related to the environment.2

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Why Americans Are Delaying Parenthood

Four studies offer new insights on the decision to have kids in a low birth rate era.

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Today’s Research on Aging 44: More Than a Feeling: How Social Connection Protects Health in Later Life

Older adults’ social ties are more important for physical and mental health than previously thought, new research shows.

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Report. Population Trends and Challenges in the Middle East and North Africa

(2001) The people of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) have long played an integral, if sometimes volatile, role in the history of human civilization. MENA is one of the cradles of civilization and of urban culture. Three of the world's major religions originated in the region — Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Universities existed in MENA long before they did in Europe.

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