Showing 1 - 20 results of 60 for search '(( significantly ((lower decrease) OR (we decrease)) ) OR ( significant economic decrease ))~', query time: 0.52s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Analytical framework and statistical methods. by Na Chen (153323)

    Published 2024
    “…Our findings reveal significant variations in income insecurity and social protection responses across these groups. the pandemic had a significant impact on household incomes globally, with lower-middle-income countries experiencing the most significant income reductions. …”
  2. 2

    Theoretical frameworks of social protection. by Na Chen (153323)

    Published 2024
    “…Our findings reveal significant variations in income insecurity and social protection responses across these groups. the pandemic had a significant impact on household incomes globally, with lower-middle-income countries experiencing the most significant income reductions. …”
  3. 3

    BMI groups by SES. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  4. 4

    BMISES_Data_Part2. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  5. 5

    Logistic regression for LSES population. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  6. 6

    Logistic regression for HSES population. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  7. 7

    Logistic regression for overall population. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  8. 8

    BMISES_Data_Part1. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  9. 9

    Baseline characteristics of HSES/LSES population. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  10. 10

    Baseline characteristics of overall population. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  11. 11

    Diagram of study population. by Krystal Hunter (6820052)

    Published 2025
    “…This relationship was not found in higher economic status women. Our study had two significant findings. …”
  12. 12

    GLM models for predictors of monthly HIV costs. by Drew B. Cameron (10687420)

    Published 2024
    “…</p><p>Conclusions</p><p>Patient out of pocket costs of care for HIV and HTN were substantial, but significantly lower during the 2021 full COVID-19 lockdown in Uganda. …”
  13. 13

    Median cost (USD) per visit breakdown. by Drew B. Cameron (10687420)

    Published 2024
    “…</p><p>Conclusions</p><p>Patient out of pocket costs of care for HIV and HTN were substantial, but significantly lower during the 2021 full COVID-19 lockdown in Uganda. …”
  14. 14

    Summary statistics. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”
  15. 15

    Month of interview by world region. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”
  16. 16

    Effect by world bank income classification. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”
  17. 17

    Marginal effect of additional hot day on SWB. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”
  18. 18

    Income satisfaction measure. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”
  19. 19

    Marginal effect of HTD on income and SWB. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”
  20. 20

    Estimation procedure flow-chart. by Stephan Dietrich (6979985)

    Published 2025
    “…The data comes from a life evaluation question collected on nationally representative surveys covering 160 countries, conducted annually for 13 years. We take advantage of 40 years of variation in daily land surface temperature data, finding that one additional exceptionally hot day significantly lowers wellbeing, by roughly 0.5% on average. …”