Economic contraction and birth outcomes: an integrative review. (9/100)

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Health spending projections through 2019: the recession's impact continues. (10/100)

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Changes in occupational safety and health indices after the Korean economic crisis: analysis of a national sample, 1991-2007. (11/100)

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Effects of macroeconomic conditions on health in Brazil. (12/100)

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Last hired, first fired? Black-white unemployment and the business cycle. (13/100)

Studies have tested the claim that blacks are the last hired during periods of economic growth and the first fired in recessions by examining the movement of relative unemployment rates over the business cycle. Any conclusion drawn from this type of analysis must be viewed as tentative because cyclical movements in the underlying transitions into and out of unemployment are not examined. Using Current Population Survey data matched across adjacent months from 1989-2004, this article provides the first detailed examination of labor market transitions for prime-age black and white men to test the last hired, first fired hypothesis. Considerable evidence is presented that blacks are the first fired as the business cycle weakens. However no evidence is found that blacks are the last hired. Instead, blacks appear to be initially hired from the ranks of the unemployed early in the business cycle and later are drawn from nonparticipation. The narrowing of the racial unemployment gap near the peak of the business cycle is driven by a reduction in the rate of job loss for blacks rather than increases in hiring.  (+info)

Health in financial crises: economic recession and tuberculosis in Central and Eastern Europe. (14/100)

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Sustaining health reform in a recession: an update on Massachusetts as of fall 2009. (15/100)

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Dynamics of family economic hardship and the progression of health problems of husbands and wives during the middle years: a perspective from rural Mid-West. (16/100)

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