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Volumn 50, Issue 1-2, 2003, Pages 102-126
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Economic distress and cause-of-death patterns for black and non-black men in Chicago: reconsidering the relevance of classic epidemiological transition theory.
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
AFRICAN AMERICAN;
ARTICLE;
CAUSE OF DEATH;
CLUSTER ANALYSIS;
CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY;
DEMOGRAPHY;
DEVELOPED COUNTRY;
ETHNOLOGY;
HEALTH;
HUMAN;
INCOME;
LIFE EXPECTANCY;
MALE;
POVERTY;
SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT;
SOCIOECONOMICS;
STATISTICAL MODEL;
STATISTICS;
THEORETICAL MODEL;
UNEMPLOYMENT;
UNITED STATES;
VULNERABLE POPULATION;
AFRICAN AMERICANS;
CAUSE OF DEATH;
CHICAGO;
CLUSTER ANALYSIS;
CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDIES;
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES;
HUMANS;
INCOME;
LIFE EXPECTANCY;
MALE;
MODELS, ECONOMIC;
MODELS, THEORETICAL;
POVERTY AREAS;
RESIDENCE CHARACTERISTICS;
SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT;
SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS;
UNEMPLOYMENT;
URBAN HEALTH;
VULNERABLE POPULATIONS;
MLCS;
MLOWN;
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EID: 16544370110
PISSN: 0037766X
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1080/19485565.2003.9989067 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (5)
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References (0)
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