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Project: Demographic Forecasting Services—AMBAG

Baby Boomers and Millennials Boost Population in Parts of Rural America

Two demographic groups—young adults ages 20 to 34 and older adults ages 65 and older—are reshaping the population in rural America.

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U.S. 2020 Census FAQ

The Census counts every person who usually lives in the United States. They don’t have to be a U.S. citizen, but they do have to call this country their primary home.

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Avian Flu and Influenza Pandemics

(2006) As avian flu kills a growing number of people and outbreaks of the virus are reported in birds from China to Turkey, public health officials fear a new global influenza pandemic could already be brewing.

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Children’s Environmental Health: Risks and Remedies

(2002) Overall child mortality declined significantly in the 1990s, but environmental hazards still kill at least 3 million children under age 5 every year.1 Such young children make up roughly 10 percent of the world's population, but comprise more than 40 percent of the population suffering from health problems related to the environment.2

View Details Array ( [ID] => 8363 [id] => 8363 [title] => ChildrensEnvironHlth_Eng [filename] => ChildrensEnvironHlth_Eng.pdf [filesize] => 116594 [url] => https://www.prb.org/wp-content/uploads/2002/07/ChildrensEnvironHlth_Eng.pdf [link] => https://www.prb.org/resources/childrens-environmental-health-risks-and-remedies/childrensenvironhlth_eng/ [alt] => [author] => 15 [description] => CHILDREN’S ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH: RISKS AND REMEDIES [caption] => [name] => childrensenvironhlth_eng [status] => inherit [uploaded_to] => 8162 [date] => 2020-12-16 22:14:53 [modified] => 2020-12-16 22:15:12 [menu_order] => 0 [mime_type] => application/pdf [type] => application [subtype] => pdf [icon] => https://www.prb.org/wp-includes/images/media/document.png ) Download (0.1 MB)

Delivery Care Is Key for Maternal Survival: A Story of Two States in Nigeria

Yemi Omoshola, a woman from Lagos State, in southwestern Nigeria, needed blood desperately. Her doctor's attempts to induce delivery of her overdue baby had caused excessive bleeding. Unfortunately, the hospital had no blood bank. While her husband searched for blood, Mrs. Omoshola lost consciousness and died.

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Empowering Women, Developing Society: Female Education in the Middle East and North Africa

(2003) Education is a key part of strategies to improve individuals' well-being and societies' economic and social development.

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HIV/AIDS and African Americans: A State of Emergency

(2005) More African Americans are living with HIV or already dead from AIDS than any other single racial or ethnic group in the United States—a crisis one black AIDS activist calls "a state of emergency" for the African American community.

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Economic Recession Presents Further Challenges to Uninsured Children in the United States

(2009) One in every 10 children in the United States had no health insurance in 2007, and the cost of insurance to families and employers is rising, according to a new report by the Institute of Medicine. America's Uninsured Crisis: Consequences for Health and Health Care is an independent assessment of published studies and surveys and provides new research on how lack of coverage affects U.S. children and families.

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