• The development of different taxonomies for describing rural America is central to policy relevant research, policy analysis, political debate, and the implementation of federal and state programs. (washington.edu)
  • A 2004 national study on youth gangs in rural America said scientific proof of the theory that rural gangs are increasing is limited. (edweek.org)
  • Agencies across North America were nominated for one of two Community Impact Awards, urban and rural. (globenewswire.com)
  • Rather, it acknowledges that the state of the economy in small-town and rural America highlighted throughout the campaign and after the election surely deserves attention. (brookings.edu)
  • Although starting and growing a successful small business can be more difficult in rural America, it also can be more impactful. (score.org)
  • Americans are on the move-and rural businesses are feeling it: With rural America losing population, rural entrepreneurs (45.3%) are significantly more likely than non-rural entrepreneurs (25.5%) to say that population trends impact their business. (score.org)
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recently focused more on the issue of health disparities in rural America and has outlined ways in which these disparities can be addressed. (statista.com)
  • The large demographic shifts reshaping America are playing out differently across urban, suburban and rural communities. (pewresearch.org)
  • The study, one of the first to look at the link between living in rural America and first-time cases of heart failure, underscores the importance of developing more customized approaches to heart failure prevention among rural residents, particularly Black men. (nih.gov)
  • At the end of the study period, the researchers found that living in rural America was associated with an increased risk of heart failure among both women and Black men, even after adjustment for other cardiovascular risk factors and socioeconomic status. (nih.gov)
  • This analysis applies quite well to the culture wars in America, to a large extent a result of the widening gulf between rural and urban populations. (econintersect.com)
  • At the National Summit on Journalism in Rural America in July, McDuffie said state-level nonprofits are "the most sustainable path forward for rural newsrooms. (nna.org)
  • Research on the common sparrow (Passer domesticus) has shown that populations along a rural-urban gradient can also genetically differentiate from one another over relatively small distances. (wikipedia.org)
  • In contrast, research on the black-headed gull (Chroicocephalus ridibundus) has shown that this genetic differentiation does not always appear along a rural-urban gradient, as the research did not show any significant difference between the genetic make-up of urban and rural populations. (wikipedia.org)
  • In 2015, rural US residents experienced higher rates of Medicare-covered hospitalizations for and deaths from COPD than residents living in more urban areas (those with populations of at least 10,000 people). (cdc.gov)
  • Rural populations may have more COPD-related issues due to more people smoking, 2 increased exposure to secondhand smoke, and less access to smoking cessation programs compared with people living in more urban areas. (cdc.gov)
  • Below are a few key stats about urban and rural populations, economies and housing, and the different types of critical challenges these communities face. (nlc.org)
  • How do death rates differ between rural and urban populations? (statista.com)
  • Strategically placed long-distance transmission also ensures that rural and urban populations benefit economically from the transition to clean energy. (fas.org)
  • This study makes it clear that we need tools or interventions specifically designed to prevent heart failure in rural populations, particularly among Black men living in these areas. (nih.gov)
  • We look forward to future studies testing interventions to prevent heart failure in rural populations as we continue to fight heart disease, the leading cause of death in the U.S. (nih.gov)
  • The Rural-Urban gradient is a gradient that is used to describe how Anthropocene effects affect their surroundings and how they compare to areas less affected by Anthropocene effects. (wikipedia.org)
  • At first, research mainly focused on characteristics involved in land cover structures, the biota of the rural-urban areas and socio-economic structures. (wikipedia.org)
  • Regions, cities and rural areas - and their differences - play a crucial role in the adaptation to megatrends (climate change, digitalisation, demographic shifts, globalisation) and their highly asymmetric impacts within OECD countries. (oecd.org)
  • The OECD's Regional Development Policy Committee (RDPC) designs and implements effective place-based policies to improve living standards and well-being for citizens across all regions, cities, and rural areas. (oecd.org)
  • Most of current definitions of rural are based on county boundaries, which results in substantial under and over bounding of urban areas (rural areas being lumped with large urban areas). (washington.edu)
  • Many current definitions are dichotomies and do not appropriately take into account the great variation across rural areas. (washington.edu)
  • Learn how COPD diagnosis, Medicare hospitalizations, and deaths vary from urban to rural areas. (cdc.gov)
  • The percentage of adults in rural areas who have been diagnosed with COPD is nearly double the percentage in large metropolitan areas, according to data released in CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) . (cdc.gov)
  • 1 The study reported in MMWR examined how many people have COPD in urban and rural areas using data from the 2015 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System ( BRFSS ). (cdc.gov)
  • Hospitalizations among Medicare enrollees were about 14 per 1000 enrollees in rural areas compared with about 11 per 1000 enrollees in large metropolitan centers. (cdc.gov)
  • Death rates from COPD were also greater among people living in rural areas (about 55 per 100,000 people) versus people living in large metropolitan centers (32 per 100,000 people). (cdc.gov)
  • Additional efforts are needed to prevent and reduce risk factors and overcome barriers to early diagnosis and appropriate treatment and management of COPD in rural areas. (cdc.gov)
  • This study highlights the need for continued tobacco cessation programs and policies to prevent COPD and improve pulmonary function among adults with COPD in rural areas in particular. (cdc.gov)
  • WASHINGTON DC - In some U.S. states, the sharp political rift between Republicans and Democrats is also a geographical divide in which political power is controlled by liberal progressives in heavily populated urban areas. (voanews.com)
  • Scott Strzelczyk, one of the leaders of the Maryland secession group, says conservatives in the rural western areas of his state adamantly oppose new taxes, environmental regulations and gun control measures that are being imposed on them by the liberal majority in the eastern cities that control the political process. (voanews.com)
  • Urban gangs sometimes involving school-aged students appear to be moving into rural areas in at least two states, according to recent newspaper reports. (edweek.org)
  • reported urban gangs were moving into West Tennessee's rural areas, and gang crime has tripled in the state's less-populated regions since 2005. (edweek.org)
  • Gang activity has become more prevalent in rural areas because they have less law enforcement compared to bigger cities. (edweek.org)
  • It's also more difficult for gangs to exist in urban areas. (edweek.org)
  • Officials said parental-awareness programs are especially critical to neighborhood schools in rural areas, and they highlighted a program called "The Gang Wise Project. (edweek.org)
  • Rural lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students feel less safe at school than their peers in suburban and urban areas, according to a national study on LGBT students in rural and small town schools. (edweek.org)
  • The study, "Strengths and Silences: The Experiences of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Students in Rural and Small Town Schools," was released last week by the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network and examines the experiences of more than 2,300 LGBT high school students in rural areas. (edweek.org)
  • Anti-LGBT bullying is a problem in many areas of the country, but this report suggests that efforts to address anti-LGBT bullying may require particular attention in rural areas," according to the report. (edweek.org)
  • DEC. 8, 2016 - People who live in rural areas are more likely to own their own homes, live in their state of birth and have served in the military than their urban counterparts, according to the latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey . (census.gov)
  • Rural areas cover 97 percent of the nation's land area but contain 19.3 percent of the population (about 60 million people)," Census Bureau Director John H. Thompson said. (census.gov)
  • There were about 47 million adults 18 years and older living in rural areas. (census.gov)
  • Most adults in both rural and urban areas owned their own homes but the percentage was higher in rural areas (81.1 percent compared with 59.8 percent). (census.gov)
  • Adults in rural areas were also more likely to live in single-family homes (78.3 percent compared with 64.6 percent) and live in their state of birth (65.4 percent compared with 48.3 percent). (census.gov)
  • Veterans comprised 10.4 percent of the population of adults in rural areas compared with 7.8 percent of adults in urban areas. (census.gov)
  • Adults in rural areas had a median age of 51, making them older compared with adults in urban areas with a median age of 45. (census.gov)
  • Rural communities had fewer adults born in other countries compared with those in urban areas (4.0 percent compared with 19.0 percent). (census.gov)
  • About 13.4 million children under the age of 18 lived in the rural areas of the nation. (census.gov)
  • Children in rural areas had lower rates of poverty (18.9 percent compared with 22.3 percent) but more of them were uninsured (7.3 percent compared with 6.3 percent). (census.gov)
  • A higher percentage of own children in rural areas lived in married-couple households (76.3 percent compared with 67.4 percent). (census.gov)
  • Compared with households in urban areas, rural households had lower median household income ($52,386 compared with $54,296), lower median home values ($151,300 compared with $190,900), and lower monthly housing costs for households paying a mortgage ($1,271 compared with $1,561). (census.gov)
  • Some bat species reach particularly high population densities in cities, whereas they are rather rare in rural areas. (eurekalert.org)
  • Using various indices, we analysed a global database of bat species occurrence data in terms of their spatial proximity to urban areas to derive an urban affinity value per species," explains lead author Janis Wolf, a doctoral candidate at the University of Greifswald, whose MSc thesis in the research group of Prof. Jonathan Jeschke at the Freie Uiversität Berlin and IGB formed the basis of this publication. (eurekalert.org)
  • We used various indicators to differentiate species who tend to live in urban areas from those who tend to avoid them. (eurekalert.org)
  • Based on the traits and spatial data of 356 bat species worldwide (a quarter of the 1,400 bat species on our planet), the team determined whether the respective species tended to have a distribution focus on urban or rural areas. (eurekalert.org)
  • Of course, most bat species are positioned along a continuum that distinguishes urban-dwelling bat species from those that tended to live in rural areas," explains PD Dr Christian Voigt, head of the Department of Evolutionary Ecology at Leibniz-IZW. (eurekalert.org)
  • After controlling for socioeconomic and gender differences, we find that rural communities tend to express stress in emotional and personal themes such as relationships, health, and opportunity while users in urban areas express stress using relative, temporal, and external themes such as work, politics, and economics. (aaai.org)
  • Rather than looking separately at urban and rural areas and what matters to each of them, it is vital to look at the linkages between them: it is from here that lasting change will come. (iied.org)
  • This is especially true for small-scale family farmers in rural areas and the areas that surround urban settlements (peri-urban). (iied.org)
  • To bridge the gap between urban and rural areas, we first need to understand what sets these communities apart and where they have common ground. (nlc.org)
  • The problem with these definitions is that more than half of the country's rural population, as defined by the Census, lives in less densely populated parts of OMB metropolitan areas. (nlc.org)
  • No matter how you slice it though, the clear majority of Americans live in urban areas. (nlc.org)
  • However, not all rural communities are the same, and some are outpacing the growth of urban areas on key economic indicators. (nlc.org)
  • For example, many rural areas have higher rates of entrepreneurship , and the National League of Cities' (NLC) own research found that businesses that export their goods and services are thriving in rural communities. (nlc.org)
  • Rural areas in many states are also making outsized contributions to their states' GDP. (nlc.org)
  • Younger adults are both more likely to rent and more likely to live in urban areas. (nlc.org)
  • Rural areas have an older demographic , whom are both more likely to own their homes and age in place. (nlc.org)
  • In a world dependent on online communications, broadband access remains a challenge in rural areas. (nlc.org)
  • In all states, broadband access is higher in urban areas than in rural ones. (nlc.org)
  • Although overall opioid mortality rates are higher in urban counties, mortality rates in rural areas have increased more quickly across all regions over the last two decades. (nlc.org)
  • Between 1999 and 2016, opioid death rates in rural areas have quadrupled among the 18 to 25 age group, and tripled for females. (nlc.org)
  • Unfortunately, resources are more limited in rural areas. (nlc.org)
  • Millennial Credit Scores: Are They Higher in Urban or Rural Areas? (experian.com)
  • Do Millennials Have Higher Credit Scores in Urban or Rural Areas? (experian.com)
  • It turns out that millennials in urban areas have, on average, higher credit scores than their peers in more rural areas in the same state. (experian.com)
  • In nearly all of the 10 states and metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) we compared, the scores of urban millennials bested the scores of millennials who didn't live in a major city. (experian.com)
  • All of the following data is specific to millennials in MSAs and non-MSA (rural) areas from the second quarter (Q2) of 2019. (experian.com)
  • In the wake of the 2016 presidential election, many analysts have interpreted Donald Trump's victory as the product of economic anxiety among the white working class-particularly in the smaller towns and rural areas that provided his electoral margin in closely contested states like North Carolina, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. (brookings.edu)
  • Anne Case and Angus Deaton uncovered alarming evidence that mortality rates have risen among white Americans with lower levels of education , paralleling a rapid increase in drug overdoses largely concentrated in non-urban areas . (brookings.edu)
  • The statistic depicts the availability of certain download speeds in rural as compared to urban areas of Colorado. (statista.com)
  • In 100 percent of the urban areas, a download speed of 786 kbps was available in 2011. (statista.com)
  • For those in rural areas, the scarcity of local bank branches can be an added barrier. (score.org)
  • Small businesses in both rural and non-rural areas, meanwhile, say they're challenged by a lack of technology knowledge or assistance. (score.org)
  • The health care challenges faced by those in rural areas of the United States can be vastly different from those faced by their urban counterparts. (statista.com)
  • Those living in rural areas tend to be older and poorer and access to health care is a continuing problem. (statista.com)
  • Over the past couple decades there has always been a significant difference in overall death rates among those who live in rural areas compared to those who live in urban areas in the United States, and this difference has grown even more intense over the past few years. (statista.com)
  • In 2019, the overall death rate among those in urban areas in the U.S. was around 693 per 100,000 population. (statista.com)
  • In comparison, the death rate among those in rural areas was 834 per 100,00 population. (statista.com)
  • Heart disease and cancer are the leading causes of death in both rural and urban areas , however rates of both diseases are higher in rural areas than urban areas. (statista.com)
  • Those in rural areas also have higher rates of death from unintentional injuries, chronic lower respiratory disease, and suicide. (statista.com)
  • Those living in rural areas in the United States often do not have access to the same quality health care as those in urban areas and are also more likely to not have health insurance coverage. (statista.com)
  • The Biden-Harris Administration should facilitate the transition to a clean grid by aggressively supporting utility-scale renewable energy resources in rural areas that are connected to urban centers through modernized high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission. (fas.org)
  • This two-pronged approach will move loads from high-generation, low-demand rural areas to low-generation, high-demand (often coastal) urban hubs. (fas.org)
  • Research shows an inverted relationship between severe obesity and urbanization, with severe obesity highest in more rural areas (8). (cdc.gov)
  • Although rural areas are more likely than urban areas to be food deserts, rural-urban differences in food insecurity are more nuanced (11). (cdc.gov)
  • The prevalence of food insecurity has been reported to be approximately 11% in rural areas, lowest in suburban areas (8.8%), and highest in cities (12.2%) (12). (cdc.gov)
  • The integrated development of urban and rural areas can effectively solve the problem of insufficient rural development in China, and finally solve the problem of insufficient and unbalanced development in China, so as to achieve high-quality development and common prosperity. (scirp.org)
  • The integrated development of urban and rural areas refers to the dynamic process of achieving all-round human development through the formation of new regional organizational structure, balanced resource element allocation pattern, complementary urban and rural functional patterns, etc. under the condition of full development of social productive forces, which is caused by system reform, technological progress, demand growth, and cultural innovation and so on. (scirp.org)
  • The huge market demand generated by the economic development in the new era and the substantial improvement of rural working and living conditions have greatly enhanced the connectivity between urban and rural areas, creating huge space for promoting the integrated development of urban and rural areas and creating new conditions for the establishment of institutions and mechanisms for the integrated development of urban and rural areas. (scirp.org)
  • Western scholars after Marx and Engels have made valuable discussions on the relationship between urban and rural areas. (scirp.org)
  • But as several states have passed laws loosening these restrictions, NPPs have filled gaps left by the shortage of physicians in primary care and emergency departments, especially in rural areas, which face the biggest recruitment challenges. (dotmed.com)
  • While not surprised to see higher rates of NPPs in rural and small-town settings (3.9%) interpreting imaging compared to their urban counterparts (2.8%), they were intrigued that growth rates for this practice in urban areas (31%) were higher than in micropolitan areas (19%), and that in rural and small-town areas, growth was not statistically significant. (dotmed.com)
  • Additionally, larger radiology practices, which are more likely to employ NPPs, tend to be situated in urban areas. (dotmed.com)
  • Our findings show that NPPs are increasing their role in imaging interpretation at a greater rate in more urban areas, suggesting that the primary driver of increasing NPP scope of practice is not to address gaps in access to care," she told HCB News. (dotmed.com)
  • The findings are in line with another Harvey L. Neiman Health Policy Institute study, which showed NPPs in radiology-only practices grew 18% between 2017 and 2019, and were up 10% in urban areas, 5% in rural areas. (dotmed.com)
  • Women in rural India seem more concerned about their own and family's security than their counterparts in urban areas. (thehindubusinessline.com)
  • As on July 8, the total number of Jan Dhan accounts was 16.73 crore, of which 6.64 crore accounts are in rural areas. (thehindubusinessline.com)
  • In urban counties, nonwhites now make up a clear majority of the population, while solid majorities in suburban and rural areas are white. (pewresearch.org)
  • Urban and suburban counties are gaining population due to an influx of immigrants in both types of counties, as well as domestic migration into suburban areas. (pewresearch.org)
  • Rural counties, however, have made only minimal population gains since 2000 as more people have left for urban or suburban areas than have moved in. (pewresearch.org)
  • However, the decrease in the gap for preventable deaths from unintentional injuries wasn't due to improvements in rural counties but to the sharp rise in urban areas, due in large part to the opioid crisis. (cdc.gov)
  • In 2010, 45.1% of deaths from heart disease in the most rural counties were potentially preventable, compared with 24.1% in large fringe metropolitan areas. (cdc.gov)
  • By 2017, 37.8% of deaths from stroke in the most rural counties were potentially preventable, compared with 17% large fringe metropolitan areas. (cdc.gov)
  • More than 46 million Americans live in rural areas, and these residents tend to be older and sicker than those living in urban areas. (cdc.gov)
  • The historical census of Pakistan has always categorized the urban and rural areas with criteria lacking a clear discernibility. (openedition.org)
  • In this research study I chose 2 criteria i.e., density and urban core proximity to differentiate areas into either rural, urban and urbanizing area. (openedition.org)
  • While province of Sindh shows a contradicting scenario showing a decrease by 18% of urban area than official census while in the province of Balochistan the urban area doesn't exist, while the remaining areas was occupied by urbanizing area. (openedition.org)
  • The findings shows that urban areas far exceed the Government statistics. (openedition.org)
  • Conversely, in Tidewater McAuliffe won big cities by 19 points and rural areas by only 10 points. (motherjones.com)
  • But within those regions, rural areas trend considerably more conservative than big cities. (motherjones.com)
  • Adults living in rural areas of the United States have a 19% higher risk of developing heart failure compared to their urban counterparts, and Black men living in rural areas have an especially higher risk - 34%, according to a large observational study supported by the National Institutes of Health. (nih.gov)
  • the remainder lived in urban areas. (nih.gov)
  • However, Black men living in rural areas had the highest risk of all - a 34% higher risk of heart failure compared to urban-dwelling Black men. (nih.gov)
  • The study showed white women living in rural areas had a 22% increased risk of heart failure compared to white women in urban areas, and Black women had an 18% higher risk compared to Black women in urban areas. (nih.gov)
  • Finding an association between living in rural areas and an increased incidence of heart failure is an important advance, especially given its implications for helping to address geographic-, gender-, and race-based disparities," said David Goff, M.D., Ph.D., director of NHLBI's Division of Cardiovascular Sciences. (nih.gov)
  • Rajesh Kumar, managing director and CEO, TransUnion CIBIL, said that they have observed a general increase in their headline CMI measure, and at the same time, they also observed a decline in delinquencies, greater credit inclusion, and growth of credit in the rural and semi-urban areas. (outlookindia.com)
  • It was observed that only rural and semi-urban areas posted an increase in loan enquiries, while enquiries from the urban areas stayed flat and those from the metro declined. (outlookindia.com)
  • In both eastern German cities as well as rural areas, industrial companies are using labor and capital almost as efficiently as their competitors in comparable regions in the west. (diw.de)
  • Progress in closing the productivity gap between eastern and western Germany can also be made by implementing a sustainable, countrywide infrastructure offensive to increase the attractiveness and growth opportunities of rural areas. (diw.de)
  • The Economic Research Service at the U.S. Department of Agriculture attributes population loss in rural areas to declines in farming and other rural industries, high poverty rates, lack of services, and - in some areas - a lack of natural amenities such as warm winters, forests, or lakes. (econintersect.com)
  • Nonprofit newspaper journalism, until now largely a feature of urban areas, is going rural - especially if the National Trust for Local News keeps up what it's doing and plans to do. (nna.org)
  • Much of the philanthropy for local journalism has gone to startups, mostly online, but they are almost entirely based in urban areas, and McDuffie and others believe philanthropists need to look at funding the purchase of legacy newspapers to prevent the creation of news deserts in rural areas. (nna.org)
  • This study aims to investigate the educational and wealth inequalities in smokeless tobacco (SLT) use in rural and urban areas of Bangladesh and India, the 2 largest global SLT users. (who.int)
  • The analysis reveals that the educational inequalities in SLT use were higher in urban areas of India and in rural areas of Bangladesh, whereas the wealth inequalities in SLT use were higher in urban areas of both the countries. (who.int)
  • Moreover, the logit model showed that the odds of SLT use declined with an increase in the level of education and wealth in rural and urban areas of India. (who.int)
  • However, no consistent pattern was observed in rural and urban areas of Bangladesh. (who.int)
  • In 2014, 54% of the world's population lived in urban areas. (lu.se)
  • Children with type 1 diabetes (T1D) living in rural areas are significantly less likely than those in urban areas to complete diabetes care visits in which continuous glucose monitor (CGM) data are used as part of patient care. (medscape.com)
  • In a retrospective study of electronic health records from a single diabetes program between 2018 and 2021, researchers compared the odds of completing a visit with or without a CGM interpretation between regions designated as rural-urban communing areas (RUCAs). (medscape.com)
  • Overall, 68.2% (9308) of visits were completed by patients living in RUCA-designated urban areas, 21.3% (2907) were in large rural towns, 7.7% (1046) were in small rural towns, and 2.8% (384) were in isolated small rural towns. (medscape.com)
  • P = .025) compared to those living in urban areas after adjusting for sex, race/ethnicity, A1c level, visit year, and insurance type. (medscape.com)
  • These data suggest that pediatric diabetes providers should be aware of the potential barriers to CGM use experienced by patients living in rural areas and attempt to work together with patients to identify and develop strategies to overcome these barriers to optimal diabetes care. (medscape.com)
  • A Reader's Guide is provided, organizing the content into major areas of study (the urban disciplines) and topics (such as the city and film) as well as important figures in the field. (lu.se)
  • 05). Among the 277 schoolchildren, the prevalence of overweight was 14.6% in the rural area, 27.1% in urban area and 30.3% in the indigenous area in boys, and 15.7% in rural areas, 17.6% in urban and 20% in Indian girls. (bvsalud.org)
  • We aim to develop new and improved tools for risk assessment, integrated modeling of flooding from urban drainage systems coupled with river catchment and recipients (rivers, lakes, wetland and sea) under hydroclimatic extremes, supported by historical data and on-site monitoring instant data especially for Nordic and arctic areas. (lu.se)
  • This indicator represents the response to the survey question 2.1a Is coverage data for major interventions analysed in terms of differences e.g. rural, suburban and specific urban areas? (who.int)
  • 51.7 million people in the Region still defecate in the open, mainly in rural areas, of whom 46.5 million live in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. (who.int)
  • There are inequalities in service between urban and rural areas. (who.int)
  • People living in rural areas are more likely to use untreated surface water (from lakes, rivers or irrigation channels) than those living in urban areas. (who.int)
  • For example, the reported use of surface water in Somalia is 19% in rural areas as opposed to 1% in urban areas. (who.int)
  • Similarly, almost all of the people who practice open defecation in the region live in rural areas. (who.int)
  • Risk factors of caesarean deliveries in urban-rural areas of Bangladesh. (bvsalud.org)
  • The key interest of this research is to identify the causes of the ongoing increasing trends in caesarean section or C-section (CS) deliveries in both urban and rural areas of Bangladesh . (bvsalud.org)
  • CS deliveries were found to be more prevalent in urban than in rural areas of Bangladesh . (bvsalud.org)
  • The 45-49 age group mothers had a five times higher likelihood of CS deliveries [ odds ratio (OR) 5.39] in urban areas than in rural areas . (bvsalud.org)
  • Wealthy mothers were more likely to be CS-delivered in urban (OR 4.84) than in rural areas (OR 3.67). (bvsalud.org)
  • The findings reveal a gradual upward alarming trend in CS deliveries with an unequal contribution of significant determinants in urban and rural areas of Bangladesh . (bvsalud.org)
  • Rural Americans exhibit higher rates of health risk factors such as smoking and being overweight and are more likely to die from certain diseases, like cancer and heart disease, than their urban counterparts. (statista.com)
  • Geographic differences in obesity have also been demonstrated among rural and urban children and adolescents, with rural children and adolescents having a higher likelihood of obesity than their urban counterparts (6,7). (cdc.gov)
  • Rural Americans tend to have higher rates of cigarette smoking, high blood pressure, and obesity, and to report less leisure-time physical activity and lower seatbelt use than their urban counterparts. (cdc.gov)
  • Overall, the risk of heart failure was about 19% higher in rural residents than their urban counterparts. (nih.gov)
  • The secessionist group in Northern Colorado has a similar list of grievances and virtually the same rural/urban divide. (voanews.com)
  • Despite the vast amount of discussion about the urban-rural divide, there is actually little agreement about what these terms mean. (nlc.org)
  • A new collection of short stories by Wisconsin author Chris Fink puts readers eye-to-eye with the fault lines of families and the divide between urban and rural cultures. (wpr.org)
  • I pitched the book as a book that explores the urban-rural divide. (wpr.org)
  • Conventional wisdom suggests that American politics is heavily dominated by a rural-urban divide, but is it possible that it's actually dominated primarily by differences between regions, as hypothesized by Colin Woodard? (motherjones.com)
  • It looks to me like the urban-rural divide is alive and kicking. (motherjones.com)
  • The Caucasus ecoregion, which includes the countries of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, and parts of Russia, Turkey and Iran, has three main urban centers - Yerevan, Tbilisi and Baku. (grida.no)
  • Transmission lines are needed to transport renewable energy from these central states to the urban centers with large energy markets. (fas.org)
  • His theme is not some vaguely defined "clash of civilizations" but rather the clash between metropolitan centers and rural peripheries that is internal to all modern civilizations-whether these be Islamic, Western, Russian, or Chinese. (econintersect.com)
  • 5 years of age in 14 hospitals and health centers in introduced widely in high- and middle-income countries, urban and rural Niger. (cdc.gov)
  • Urban-Rural County and State Differences in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease - United States, 2015. (cdc.gov)
  • Using Weibo posts from over 65,000 users across 329 counties, we build hierarchical mixed-effects models to understand linguistic differences in the experiences and expressions of stress in urban-rural China. (aaai.org)
  • Jesse Cui,Tingdan Zhang,Kokil Jaidka,Dandan Pang,Garrick Sherman,Vinit Jakhetiya,Lyle H. Ungar,Sharath Chandra Guntuku Social Media Reveals Urban-Rural Differences in Stress across China (2022) 114-124. (aaai.org)
  • Despite their differences, affordable housing is a prevalent concern amongst both urban and rural communities. (nlc.org)
  • Crouch E, Abshire DA, Wirth MD, Hung P, Benavidez GA. Rural-Urban Differences in Overweight and Obesity, Physical Activity, and Food Security Among Children and Adolescents. (cdc.gov)
  • Rural-urban differences in access to nutrition and physical activity may influence rates of overweight and obesity among children and adolescents (9), but the evidence that food environments are associated with health outcomes among children and adolescents is limited (10). (cdc.gov)
  • And while the population is graying in all three types of communities, this is happening more rapidly in the suburbs than in urban and rural counties. (pewresearch.org)
  • These trends are making urban, suburban and rural counties more distinct from one another. (pewresearch.org)
  • While classifying counties as urban, suburban and rural is useful in helping understand how the country is changing, it's important to keep in mind that there is a great deal of diversity within community types. (pewresearch.org)
  • For this analysis, counties were classified as urban, suburban or rural using the National Center for Health Statistics' 2013 Urban-Rural Classification Scheme , which takes into account whether or not a county is located within a metropolitan area. (pewresearch.org)
  • Potentially preventable deaths from the five leading causes of death occurred more often among people in the most rural counties than in the most urban counties during 2010-2017, according to a new study released today in CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report . (cdc.gov)
  • The gap in the percentages of preventable deaths between rural and urban counties widened over the eight-year study period for deaths from cancer, heart disease, and chronic lower respiratory disease. (cdc.gov)
  • Previous studies placed counties into two categories - urban or rural - but this new study breaks counties down further into six categories: large central metropolitan (the most urban), large fringe metropolitan, medium metropolitan, small metropolitan, micropolitan, and noncore (the most rural). (cdc.gov)
  • In 2010, 28.7% of deaths from cancer in the most rural counties were potentially preventable, compared with 17.9% in the most urban counties. (cdc.gov)
  • By 2017, 21.7% of cancer deaths in the most rural counties were potentially preventable, compared with 3.2% in the most urban counties. (cdc.gov)
  • In 2010, 54.3% of deaths from chronic lower respiratory disease (such as COPD) in the most rural counties were potentially preventable, compared with 23.4% in the most urban counties. (cdc.gov)
  • By 2017, 57.1% of deaths from chronic lower respiratory disease in the most rural counties were potentially preventable, compared with 13% in the most urban counties. (cdc.gov)
  • In the most rural counties he won by a convincing 51.0 to 41.1. (motherjones.com)
  • At the same time, in Greater Appalachia Cuccinelli won big cities by 3 points and rural counties by 32 points. (motherjones.com)
  • Urban-rural status is based on county of residence using the National Center for Health Statistics Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties. (cdc.gov)
  • From 2000 to 2020, the rate increased in both urban and rural counties: from 7.1 to 12.7 in urban counties and from 7.0 to 15.8 in rural counties. (cdc.gov)
  • From 2019 to 2020, the rate increased by 26% for urban counties and 30% for rural counties, which was the largest increase for both urban and rural counties during the 2000-2020 period. (cdc.gov)
  • Rates were similar between rural and urban counties from 2000 to 2004, but from 2005 to 2020 rates were higher in rural counties than in urban counties. (cdc.gov)
  • By 2020, the rate in rural counties was 24% higher than in urban counties. (cdc.gov)
  • Although the northeast remains home to much of the country's rural population, it also includes a burgeoning urban society . (britannica.com)
  • This paper focuses on the huge population of rural-to-urban migrants in China. (repec.org)
  • Rural and urban unemployment rates have improved in recent years, but labor force participation - the share of the population working or seeking employment - remains below pre-recession levels. (nlc.org)
  • It has created enormous cities, has greatly increased the urban population as compared with the rural, and has thus rescued a considerable part of the population from the idiocy of rural life. (google.com)
  • Rural businesses are hurting for workers: Population shifts create challenges for small rural employers, over a third of which (35.9%) say there are few qualified workers in their area. (score.org)
  • Rural population is primarily distributed on the plains and coasts. (grida.no)
  • Population-dense and predominantly coastal cities have higher energy demand, while the Midwest and Southwest are dominated by rural communities and public land. (fas.org)
  • The analysis shows that the provinces of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have higher percentage of urban population by 27% and 3% than the official census, respectively. (openedition.org)
  • Many rural communities, particularly in the Midwest, have been losing population for decades and are on the brink of extinction. (econintersect.com)
  • SELAYANG: Rural students are on par with their urban peers in the Sijil Tinggi Persekolahan Malaysia (STPM) 2021 examination results for the first time since 2013. (thestar.com.my)
  • Those who live in rural communities tend to be older (with an average age of 51 years, versus 46 in urban communities) and less educated (20 percent with a bachelor's degree versus 29 percent in urban communities). (nlc.org)
  • Wolf JM, Jeschke JM, Voigt CC, Itescu, Y (2022): Urban affinity and its associated traits: a global analysis of bats. (eurekalert.org)
  • Funding for rural health by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has also increased in recent years and is expected to reach 762 million U.S. dollars by the year 2022. (statista.com)
  • By creating jobs, stimulating innovation and nurturing productivity, small and locally-owned businesses can help rural towns and geographies prosper in ways that improve the physical, social and economic well-being of the people who live in them. (score.org)
  • TransUnion CIBIL has come out with an insightful CMI loan report, highlighting the current Indian retail loan trends across urban and rural geographies, and sectors, such as retail, auto, home and cards. (outlookindia.com)
  • Based on in-depth ethnographic research--and using an approach that seeks to understand how migration is experienced by the migrants themselves--this is a fascinating study of the experiences of women in rural China who joined the vast migration to Beijing and other cities at the end of the twentieth century. (google.com)
  • Linkages at these levels support rural-urban linkages. (iied.org)
  • While 63 percent of rural Americans say they have a broadband internet connection at home , increased from 35 percent in 2007, there are still many challenges to improving accessibility . (nlc.org)
  • In the paper rituals and ceremonies, in the form of ancestor worship during New Year celebrations and temple fairs, in one village will be discussed with respect to their temporal, spatial, sensory and performative memory practices, and contrasted with attempt to re-create and re-imagine the past through heritage mapping and heritage trails in one urban neighbourhood. (lu.se)
  • The ZIP code version of the RUCAs provides a sub-county alternative rural/urban taxonomy that uses a geographic unit (ZIP code area) that is readily available on many health care data sets. (washington.edu)
  • Modelling differential stress expressions in urban and rural regions in China can provide a better understanding of the effects of urbanization on psychological well-being in a country that has rapidly grown economically in the last two decades. (aaai.org)
  • This share continues to grow as people move from rural to urban regions. (nlc.org)
  • Children showed high rates of overweight in all regions, demonstrating that poor eating habits and a sedentary lifestyle are not only characteristics of urban centres. (bvsalud.org)
  • The report also said rural gangs are unlike urban ones in many ways, and the policies aimed at suppressing them should target the unique characteristics of rural youth gangs. (edweek.org)
  • A scientific team from Freie Universität Berlin, the University of Greifswald, the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB) and the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) now investigated which characteristics are typical for urban and rural bats. (eurekalert.org)
  • in contrast, we identify a positive, 'signal' effect vis-à-vis urban workers: larger urban incomes indicate higher income prospects for the migrants. (repec.org)
  • Relative concerns of rural-to-urban migrants in China ," Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization , Elsevier, vol. 81(2), pages 421-441. (repec.org)
  • Relative Concerns of Rural-to-Urban Migrants in China ," LISER Working Paper Series 2011-12, Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER). (repec.org)
  • Relative Concerns of Rural-to-Urban Migrants in China ," Working Papers 201104, School of Economics, University College Dublin. (repec.org)
  • Relative Concerns of Rural-to-Urban Migrants in China ," IZA Discussion Papers 5480, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA). (repec.org)
  • It focuses on the experiences of rural-urban migrants, the particular ways in which they talk about those experiences, and how those experiences affect their sense of identity. (google.com)
  • The authors argue that identifying traits that characterise successful and less successful urban dwellers may be useful in identifying those species that are more threatened by the rapidly advancing urbanisation process worldwide, and ultimately allow to prioritise these species with regard to conservation measures. (eurekalert.org)
  • The RUCA Codes are based on standard Census Bureau commuting data and Urbanized Area and Urban Cluster definitions. (washington.edu)
  • The most common definitions are from the Census Bureau - "mostly urban," "mostly rural" or "completely rural" - and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) - "metropolitan" or "non-metropolitan. (nlc.org)
  • Pu, X. (2020) A Research Review on the Development of Urban-Rural Integration. (scirp.org)
  • During 2005-2020, rural rates increased at a greater pace than did urban rates. (cdc.gov)
  • In many low- and middle-income nations, demand for food by urban households is more important than exports. (iied.org)
  • 3 Rural residents are also more likely to be uninsured and have higher poverty levels, which may lead to less access to early diagnosis and treatment. (cdc.gov)
  • The lilting voice of Rachel Ries comes to us courtesy of many different landscapes: the wide open spaces of South Dakota, the equatorial humidity of Africa, the bucolic green of Vermont and the managed urban chaos that is Brooklyn. (npr.org)
  • Rural participants were able to attend up to 42 workshop hours per year. (aapt.org)
  • An additional goal is was to identify rural participants who exhibited leadership potential as well as content knowledge to apply for national AAPT/PTRA leader training and thus work toward a locally implemented rural site. (aapt.org)
  • According to the latest gross enrolment data of three social security schemes, the number of rural female participants is higher than urban females. (thehindubusinessline.com)
  • Therefore, National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) entered into an agreement with U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development ( HUD ) to use its geocoding services to assign geographic codes to the NHANES address data. (cdc.gov)
  • With sufficient capital and expertise, conserving and transforming existing news sources IS an efficient way to strengthen democracy and support that civic and social fabric of small towns and rural communities," he told NENPA, emphasizing the verb. (nna.org)
  • As of now, there is no clear pattern on how ecosystem services are affected by the rural-urban gradient, as it still differs widely between different cities and is dependent on other factors. (wikipedia.org)
  • Yet only five minutes away in the heavily urban Takhmao town - which borders Phnom Penh to its north and Svay Rolum to its south and administratively includes Hun Sen's heavily fortified home - the CPP, as in much of Kandal, did much better at holding off the CNRP. (phnompenhpost.com)
  • A lot has changed in two decades, and come next month Sokchan, who is now 77, will be facing an entirely different and far more desirable challenge - leading his community as the new commune chief for Svay Rolum, about 20 kilometres south of the Phnom Penh city centre in Kandal province's rural Sa'ang district. (phnompenhpost.com)
  • Sokchan isn't entirely certain what caused the reversal - "The people were angry with the CPP," he suggested - but a look around the commune suggests that after decades of the CPP promising development, and of seeing neighbouring Takhmao become increasingly urban, residents were less than satisfied with the share they'd received. (phnompenhpost.com)
  • Rural entrepreneurs in the United States are experiencing growing economic anxiety due to various challenges, including access to capital, workforce development, and digital infrastructure. (score.org)
  • ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability is a global network working with more than 2,500 local and regional governments committed to sustainable urban development. (iclei.org)
  • To establish and improve effective systems and mechanisms and promote the healthy development of urban-rural integration, the development of urban-rural integration must be comprehensively grasped. (scirp.org)
  • This study attempts to make a comprehensive introduction to the research on urban-rural integrated development by sorting out, analyzing and summarizing the relevant important research results at home and abroad, so as to provide a theoretical basis for the establishment and improvement of the urban-rural integrated development system and mechanism in China. (scirp.org)
  • The reports of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China called for "the establishment and improvement of systems, mechanisms and policy systems for integrated urban-rural development, and the acceleration of agricultural and rural modernization", and opened a new starting point for building systems and mechanisms for integrated urban-rural development. (scirp.org)
  • The theory of urban-rural integrated development originated in the 16th century, when the British utopian socialist Thomas Moore first proposed the idea of "urban-rural integration" in his book Utopia, which was the original germination of the idea of urban-rural integrated development. (scirp.org)
  • This theory profoundly reveals the essence and law of urban and rural social development and forms a relatively mature thought of urban and rural integrated development. (scirp.org)
  • The aim is to present a retrospective and prospective overview of rural studies that focuses on critical discussions of the role of theory in the development and contingency of rural research. (lu.se)
  • This has left some rural conservatives groups tired of their powerless minority status and looking to secede, not from the country but from the states where they reside. (voanews.com)
  • Strzelczyk says he knows his goal will be difficult to reach, and maybe even nearly impossible, but for frustrated and isolated rural conservatives it may be the only option left. (voanews.com)
  • The culture wars are to a large extent fought across rural - urban boundaries, and the conservatives are losing. (econintersect.com)
  • Health care providers and community partners that serve rural residents can help adults with COPD increase access to and participation in these health care interventions. (cdc.gov)
  • Specifically, the gap between urban (63 percent) and rural (59 percent) labor force participation is significant and largely attributed to an aging rural workforce. (nlc.org)
  • Small urban centres play an increasingly important role in rapidly urbanising nations. (iied.org)
  • Rural residents have higher homeownership rates (81 percent) than urban residents (60 percent). (nlc.org)
  • Cash flow is a conundrum for rural businesses: Rural entrepreneurs are more likely than non-rural entrepreneurs to say they're impacted by higher costs of doing business (i.e. rent, utilities, gas), as well as higher financing expenses (i.e. higher interest rates, costs to borrow). (score.org)
  • We examined rates of food security, physical inactivity, and overweight or obesity among rural and urban children and associations between rurality and these 3 outcomes. (cdc.gov)
  • In most likelihood, the stores in urban slums would be based on the same concept offering daily staple items at prices lower than MRP. (labnol.org)
  • Rural area housing challenges are compounded by the fact that residents typically have lower median incomes and available affordable housing is often poor quality . (nlc.org)
  • Health-related behaviors by urban-rural county classification-United States, 2013. (cdc.gov)
  • Health insurance is a competitive advantage: Rural (35.3%) and non-rural (36.4%) entrepreneurs agree that better health care options would help them succeed, especially as they struggle to compete with larger employers for qualified talent. (score.org)
  • Rural and urban health in the U.S. (statista.com)
  • We did not expect to find a difference of this magnitude in heart failure among rural communities compared to urban communities, especially among rural-dwelling Black men," said Véronique L. Roger, M.D., M.P.H., the study's corresponding author and a senior investigator with the Epidemiology and Community Health Branch in NHLBI's Division of Intramural Research. (nih.gov)
  • The exact reasons behind these rural-urban health disparities are unclear and are still being explored. (nih.gov)
  • Health and structural adjustment in rural and urban Zimbabwe / Leon A. Bijlmakers, Mary T. Bassett, David M. Sanders. (who.int)
  • During their study, the team used different proxies for describing the affinity of bats for urban environments. (eurekalert.org)
  • Rural entrepreneurs are the subject of SCORE's latest study in its "Megaphone of Main Street" research series, which spotlights overlooked and undervalued small business communities. (score.org)
  • The information from this study is timely for policy makers and community partners to make informed decisions on the allocation of healthy weight and obesity prevention programs for children and adolescents in rural settings. (cdc.gov)
  • The study may also indicate that larger, urban practices may use NPPs in clinical roles that do not require trained, certified radiologists. (dotmed.com)
  • Large NIH-supported study showed that rural-dwelling Black men are at greatest risk. (nih.gov)
  • The aim of this study is to verify the overweight and height deficit in children aged 8 and 9 years, of both sexes, from urban, rural and indigenous communities of the city of Nova Laranjeiras in the State of Paraná. (bvsalud.org)
  • By combining five years of survey responses, the American Community Survey provides unequaled insight into the state of every community, whether large or small, urban or rural. (census.gov)
  • In fact, while the CNRP lost large in most of Kandal - taking only 46 communes to the CPP's 81 - it utterly dominated the two mostly rural districts of Sa'ang and Koh Thom, which stretch about 70 kilometres from Sokchan's home to the Chrey Thom crossing into Vietnam. (phnompenhpost.com)
  • For rural small business owners, however, inflation and supply chain disruptions also loom large. (score.org)
  • Our findings highlight the need for further research examining drivers of obesity disparities among children in rural communities. (cdc.gov)
  • The classification that divides people into either 'rural' or 'urban' is often used when policies are being developed but is in fact misleading and unhelpful. (iied.org)
  • Links exist between rural and urban locations in the same way that links exist between people and their activities. (iied.org)
  • This also include some more grassroots and alternative readings, commemorations, and re-imagination of urban space in the form of documenting old buildings and creating so-called heritage walks or city walks that aim to re-create and link people with the past. (lu.se)
  • For the first time in history, more people live in cities than in rural communities. (lu.se)
  • This may help explain why a new Pew Research Center survey finds most urban and rural residents feel misunderstood by those who live in other types of communities. (pewresearch.org)
  • The urban winner, Envida, has helped bridged the gap between transportation and healthcare in their community. (globenewswire.com)
  • Non-physician assistants ordering and interpreting radiology scans are increasing more in urban medical facilities than in rural and other healthcare settings. (dotmed.com)
  • Cutting tobacco's rural roots: Tobacco use in rural communities. (cdc.gov)
  • Urban centres and especially small towns can play an important role in linking rural food producers to urban consumers, but this requires supportive national policies and strategies. (iied.org)