Home » Tobacco and Health » Economic Impact and Regulation » Motherless Or Fatherless Youth And Social Security Survivors Insurance Costs Impact

Economic Impact and Regulation in Tobacco Directory

  
Bookmark and Share

Motherless Or Fatherless Youth And Social Security Survivors Insurance Costs Impact in Tobacco Shopping Supplies Directory

 

Design. U.S. 1994 agesexeducationspecific total and SA death counts were estimated using death certificate data and standard CDC SAMMEC methods with added injury mortality, respectively. We separately summed a total and b SA agesexeducationspecific death counts times their average number of youths per adult cumulative fertility, adjusted for infant mortality. We then multiplied the SA and total bereft youth counts by their average duration of Survivors Insurance, and calculated the SA cost of youth Survivors Insurance. Results. In 1994, smoking caused an estimated 44,000 male and 19,000 female U.S. deaths at ages 1554, leaving 31,000 fatherless and 12,000 motherless youths. On December 31, 1994, the SA prevalences [count SA] of fatherless or motherless youths were an estimated 220,000 17 and 86,000 16, respectively. Resulting Survivors Insurance costs were about $1.4 sensitivity range: $0.583.7 billion in 1994.

 


Website: http://leistikow.ucdavis.edu/