Research
- Craig Volden
- Bala Mulloth
- Eileen Chou
- Benjamin Castleman
- Sarah Turner
- Edgar O. Olsen
- Sophie Trawalter
- Benjamin Converse
- Christine Mahoney
- Timothy Wilson
- Adam Leive
- James H. Wyckoff
- William Shobe
- Charles Holt
- Daniel W. Player
- Daphna Bassok
- Harry Harding
- Jay Shimshack
- Jeanine Braithwaite
- John Pepper
- Richard Bonnie
- David Leblang
- John Holbein
- Leora Friedberg
- Molly Lipscomb
- James Savage
- Sebastian Tello Trillo
- Frederick P. Hitz
- Gabrielle Adams
- Gerald Warburg
- Isaac Mbiti
- Paul S. Martin
- Raymond C. Scheppach
- Ruth Gaare Bernheim
- Andrew S. Pennock
- Gerald Higginbotham
- Jazmin Brown-Iannuzzi
- Jennifer Lawless
- Michele Claibourn
- Noah Myung
- Philip Potter
- (-) Christopher J. Ruhm
How State Policies Impacted Death Rates During COVID
Despite considerable prior research, it remains unclear whether and by how much state COVID-19−related restrictions affected the number of pandemic deaths in the US. In a paper in the JAMA Health Forum, Professor Chris Ruhm finds that on the whole, stricter restrictions saved a substantial number of lives.
Estimated Prevalence of and Factors Associated With Clinically Significant Anxiety and Depression Among US Adults During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic
How much did clinically significant anxiety and depression increase among US adults during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic? In this survey study of more than 1.4 million respondents in the US Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey, responses to a screening question calibrated to a 4-item Patient Health Questionnaire score of 6 or greater suggested that aggregate prevalence of clinically significant anxiety and depression increased only modestly overall among US adults in 2020 compared with 2017 to 2019.
The Opioid Crisis, Health, Healthcare, and Crime: A Review Of Quasi-Experimental Economic Studies
This study reviews quasi-experimental studies that examine the relationship between opioids and health and healthcare, and crime outcomes in the U.S.
Has Mortality Risen Disproportionately for the Least Educated?
Two Batten professors examine whether the least educated population groups experienced the worst mortality trends at the beginning of the 21st century by measuring changes in mortality across education quartiles.
Oklahoma Wanted $17 Billion To Fight Its Opioid Crisis: What's The Real Cost?
The state's plan — and the basis of that $17 billion ask — was looking at abatement for the next three decades.
That 30-year plan was authored by Christopher Ruhm, a professor of public policy and economics at the University of Virginia. He says you can easily get into the billions when you consider the costs of dealing with this epidemic in the long term.
Cognitive Performance and Labour Market Outcomes
We use the U.S. National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 and other sources to examine how cognitive performance near the end of secondary schooling relates to labour market outcomes through age fifty. Our preferred estimates control for individual and family backgrounds, non-cognitive attributes, and survey years.
Time Preferences and Consumer Behavior
We investigate the predictive power of survey-elicited time preferences. The discount factor elicited from choice experiments using real payments predicts various health, energy, and financial outcomes, including overall self-reported health, smoking, installing energy-efficient lighting, and credit card balance.
Geographic Variation in Opioid and Heroin Involved Drug Poisoning Mortality Rates
An important barrier to formulating effective policies to address the rapid rise in U.S. fatal overdoses is that the specific drugs involved are frequently not identified on death certificates. This analysis supplies improved estimates of state opioid and heroin involved drug fatality rates in 2014, and changes from 2008 to 2014.
Drug Involvement in Fatal Overdoses
Death certificate data from the Multiple Cause of Death (MCOD) files were analyzed to better understand the drug categories most responsible for the increase in fatal overdoses occurring between 1999 and 2014. Statistical adjustment methods were used to account for the understatement in reported drug involvement occurring because death certificates frequently do not specify which drugs were involved in the deaths.
Macroeconomic Conditions and Opioid Abuse
We examine how deaths and emergency department (ED) visits related to use of opioid analgesics (opioids) and other drugs vary with macroeconomic conditions. As the county unemployment rate increases by one percentage point, the opioid death rate per 100,000 rises by 0.19 (3.6%) and the opioid overdose ED visit rate per 100,000 increases by 0.95 (7.0%).
Paid Family Leave, Fathers’ Leave-Taking, and Leave-Sharing in Dual-Earner Households
Using difference‐in‐difference and difference‐in‐difference‐in‐difference designs, we study California’s Paid Family Leave (CA‐PFL) program, the first source of government‐provided paid parental leave available to fathers in the Unites States. Relative to the pre‐treatment mean, fathers of infants in California are 46 percent more likely to be on leave when CA‐PFL is available.
Health Effects of Economic Crises
This analysis summarizes prior research and uses national, US state and county‐level data from 1976 to 2013 to examine whether the mortality effects of economic crises differ in kind from those of the more typical fluctuations. The tentative conclusion is that economic crises affect mortality rates (and presumably other measures of health) in the same way as less severe downturns – leading to improvements in physical health.