3 results match your criteria: "in the School of Social Work at Columbia University.[Affiliation]"

Identifying Policy Levers And Opportunities For Action Across States To Achieve Health Equity.

Health Aff (Millwood)

June 2017

José A. Pagán is director of the Center for Health Innovation, New York Academy of Medicine, a professor in the Department of Population Health Science and Policy at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and adjunct senior fellow of the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia.

In the United States, steps to advance health equity often take place at the state and local levels rather than the national level. Using publicly available data sources, we developed a scorecard for all fifty states and the District of Columbia that measures indicators of the use of five evidence-based policies to address domains related to health equity. The indicators are the cigarette excise tax rate, a state's Medicaid expansion status and the size of its coverage gap, percentage of four-year olds enrolled in state-funded pre-kindergarten, minimum wage level, and the presence of state-funded housing subsidy programs and homelessness prevention and rapid rehousing programs.

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The Great Recession, Public Transfers, and Material Hardship.

Soc Serv Rev

September 2012

Mitchell I. Ginsberg Professor of Contemporary Urban Problems and co-director of the Columbia Population Research Center, in the School of Social Work at Columbia University.

Economic downturns lead to lost income and increased poverty. Although high unemployment almost certainly also increases material hardship, and government transfers likely decrease hardship, the first relationship has not yet been documented and the second is poorly understood. We use data from five waves of the Fragile Families and Child Well-being Study to study the relationships between unemployment, government transfers, and material hardship.

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