Search results for "Aggregate data"

showing 10 items of 13 documents

Influence of social factors on avoidable mortality: a hospital-based case-control study.

2005

Objective. The effect of socioeconomic factors on avoidable mortality at an individual level is not well known, since most studies showing this association are based on aggregate data. The purpose of this study was to determine socioeconomic differences between those patients who die of avoidable causes and those who do not die. Methods. A matched case-control study was carried out regarding in-hospital avoidable mortality (Holland's medical care indicators) that occurred in a university hospital serving a Spanish-Mediterranean population during a 30-month period. Results. We studied 82 cases of death from avoidable causes and 300 controls matched on medical care indicators and age. The var…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsAdolescentMatched-Pair AnalysisPopulationLower risk03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsCause of DeathEpidemiologymedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineHospital MortalityeducationChildSocioeconomic statuseducation.field_of_study030505 public healthbusiness.industryPublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCase-control studyInfant NewbornInfantOdds ratioMiddle AgedLogistic ModelsSocioeconomic FactorsSpainCase-Control StudiesChild PreschoolMultivariate AnalysisEducational StatusAggregate dataFemale0305 other medical sciencebusinessDemographyResearch ArticlePublic health reports (Washington, D.C. : 1974)
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Intertemporal Substitution in the Spanish Economy: Evidence from Regional Data*

2018

This paper studies the intertemporal substitution in consumption and leisure for the Spanish economy by estimating the first‐order conditions of an individual optimization model with regional and aggregate data. While first‐order conditions determining intertemporal substitution in consumption show a good econometric fit, and the value we obtain for the intertemporal elasticity of substitution is similar to previously available results, the econometric fit of the intertemporal condition in leisure indicates that the behaviour of the Spanish labour supply over the cycle is more complex than can be explained by the canonical intertemporal choice model.

Consumption (economics)Economics and Econometrics050208 financeElasticity of substitution05 social sciencesSubstitution (logic)Instrumental variableIntertemporal choiceEconomyLabour supply0502 economics and businessValue (economics)EconomicsAggregate data050207 economics
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Economic globalization and voter turnout in established democracies

2010

This paper asks whether international economic integration negatively affects electoral turnout. The theoretical model builds on the premise that economic integration constrains the ability of national governments to shape outcomes. Citizens are conscious of such constraints and take them into account when considering the costs and benefits of casting a vote in national elections. The result is a lower inclination to vote under conditions of high economic integration. Consequently, aggregate turnout is lower the more internationally integrated a national economy is. Analysis of aggregate data for parliamentary elections in 23 OECD democracies over the period 1965–2006 robustly supports this…

Economic integrationCost–benefit analysisPolitical economyGeneral electionPolitical Science and International RelationsPremiseEconomicsVoter turnoutAggregate dataTurnoutEconomic systemEconomic globalizationElectoral Studies
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How Law Affects Lending

2006

A voluminous literature seeks to explore the relation between law and finance, but offers little insights into dynamic relation between legal change and behavioral outcomes or about the distributive effects of law on different market participants. The current paper disentangles the law-finance relation by using disaggregate data on banks’ lending patterns in 12 transition countries over a 8 year period. This allows us to control for country level heterogeneity and differentiate between different types of lenders. Employing a differences-in-differences methodology in an exclusive ”laboratory” setting as well as unique hand collected datasets on legal change as well as changes in bank ownersh…

Economics and EconometricsCollateralCreditorControl (management)Financial marketjel:G21Variety (cybernetics)jel:F34jel:G33creditor rights; credit market development; bankruptcy; collateral law; bank lendingjel:G28jel:F37BankruptcyAccountingLawAggregate dataNew entrantsBusinessFinance
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The Sustainability Factor: How Much Do Pension Expenditures Improve in Spain?

2020

The reform of 2013 represented a qualitative leap in the reform of the Spanish pension system. Unlike its predecessors, it introduced two automatic resetting mechanisms similar to those of other European countries. The first is the sustainability factor, scheduled to come into effect in 2019 but delayed until 2023, and its ultimate reversal cannot be ruled out. The objective of this study was to quantify the savings, or the lowest expenditure, that can be achieved in the Spanish public contributory pension system by applying it. These savings are measured in terms of cash&mdash

Index (economics)AccrualStrategy and ManagementEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Sample (statistics)lcsh:HG8011-999901 natural scienceslcsh:Insurance010104 statistics & probabilityActuarial present valueAccounting0502 economics and businessddc:330EconomicsEconometricsfinancial-actuarial methodpay-as-you-go systems0101 mathematicspension savingsPension050208 finance05 social sciencessustainabilityWork (electrical)actuarial equityMicrodata (HTML)Aggregate dataRisks
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Can the Students’ Career be Helpful in Predicting an Increase in Universities Income?

2013

The students’ academic failure and the delay in obtaining their final degree are a significant issue for the Italian universities and their stakeholders. Based on indicators proposed by the Italian Ministry of University, the Italian universities are awarded a financial incentive if they reduce the students’ attrition and failure. In this paper we analyze the students’ careers performance using: (1) aggregate data; (2) individual data. The first compares the performances of the Italian universities using the measures and the indicators proposed by the Ministry. The second analyzes the students’ careers through an indicator based on credit earned by each student in seven academic years. The …

Medical educationIncentiveIndividual dataPedagogyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONmedicineEconomicsAttritionAggregate dataChristian ministrymedicine.disease
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The impact of mandatory vaccination law in Italy on mmr coverage rates in two of the largest italian regions (Emilia-romagna and sicily): An effectiv…

2020

Background: Vaccine hesitancy has increased worldwide, leading to reduction in vaccination coverage rates. In particular, reduction in the coverage for the trivalent Measles-Mumps-Rubella vaccine has led to an increase of measles cases. The aim of this study is to analyze the coverage rates for the MMR vaccine in the Emilia-Romagna Region (RER) and Sicily Region (SR) between 2009 and 2018, and to correlate any significant change to index events which could have modified the trend of vaccination rates. Methods: Official aggregate data on vaccination coverage at 24 months provided by the RER and the SR were analyzed through trend analysis and related to important index events. Results: The tw…

Pharmacologylcsh:RImmunologycoverage rateslcsh:MedicineMMR vaccinemedicine.diseaseMandatory vaccinationMeaslesArticleVaccinationMandatory vaccinationTrend analysisInfectious DiseasesGeographyVaccination coverageDrug DiscoverymedicinePharmacology (medical)Aggregate datamandatory vaccinationsCoverage rateVaccine hesitancyDemography
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Price Impact Function of a Single Transaction

2004

Although supply and demand are perhaps the most fundamental concepts in economics, finding any general form for their behavior has proved to be elusive. Here we discuss our recent findings [1] on the price impact function empirically detected in the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Our study builds on earlier studies of how trading affects prices [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]. In particular, we look at the short term response to a single trade. This is done by using huge amounts of data and by measuring the market activity in units of transactions rather than seconds, so that we can more naturally aggregate data for many different stocks. This allows us to find regularities in the respons…

Reservation priceOrder (exchange)Stock exchangeFinancial economicsMid priceEconometricsEconomicsOrder bookAggregate dataDatabase transactionSupply and demand
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ei.Datasets: Real Data Sets for Assessing Ecological Inference Algorithms

2021

Ecological inference models aim to infer individual-level relationships using aggregate data. They are routinely used to estimate voter transitions between elections, disclose split-ticket voting behaviors, or infer racial voting patterns in U.S. elections. A large number of procedures have been proposed in the literature to solve these problems; therefore, an assessment and comparison of them are overdue. The secret ballot however makes this a difficult endeavor since real individual data are usually not accessible. The most recent work on ecological inference has assessed methods using a very small number of data sets with ground truth, combined with artificial, simulated data. This arti…

Split-ticket votingComputer scienceEcologyVotingmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Social SciencesInferenceAggregate dataLibrary and Information SciencesLawComputer Science Applicationsmedia_commonSocial Science Computer Review
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Spatial Vote Redistribution in Redrawn Polling Units

2012

Summary A large proportion of electoral analyses using geography are performed on a small area basis. In each new election there are always modifications to the previously existing polling units. The use of past voting results in small area aggregate data electoral forecasting models and political analyses therefore requires establishing a correspondence between old and new polling units. Traditionally, the task of tracking changes to assign an electoral history to the new units properly has been carried out by hand, comparing unit codes and census figures. This is an extremely cumbersome task that cannot always be performed, as when a massive (geographically intense) reorganization of poll…

Statistics and ProbabilityEconomics and EconometricsGeographic information systembusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectModifiable areal unit problemRedistribution (election)VotingInformation systemSpatial ecologyEconometricsAggregate dataStatistics Probability and UncertaintyPollingbusinessSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society
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