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Aizer, Anna – Journal of Human Resources, 2011
Two percent of women in the United States suffer from intimate partner violence annually, with poor and minority women disproportionately affected. I provide evidence of an important negative externality associated with domestic violence by estimating a negative and causal relationship between violence during pregnancy and newborn health,…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Pregnancy, Poverty, Body Weight
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Jayachandran, Seema – Journal of Human Resources, 2009
Smoke from massive wildfires blanketed Indonesia in late 1997. This paper examines the impact that this air pollution (particulate matter) had on fetal, infant, and child mortality. Exploiting the sharp timing and spatial patterns of the pollution and inferring deaths from "missing children" in the 2000 Indonesian Census, I find that the…
Descriptors: Child Health, Foreign Countries, Pollution, Natural Disasters
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Lien, Diana S.; Evans, William – Journal of Human Resources, 2005
Substantial increases in cigarette taxes result in decrease in smoking by pregnant women. It is also observed that there is consequent improvement in infant birth weight. The conclusions are based on the data from four states that opted to raise cigarette taxes by a large margin.
Descriptors: Infants, Smoking, Pregnancy, Body Weight
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Kalist, David E.; Molinari, Noelle A. – Journal of Human Resources, 2006
We examine whether abortion removes from the population those infants most at risk of homicide. As part of our identification strategy, we find that abortion reduces the number of unwanted births, estimating that 1 percent increase in the abortion ratio reduces unwanted births by approximately 0.35 percent. Using cross-sectional time-series data…
Descriptors: Crime, Death, Pregnancy, Infants