Perinatal Health among 1 Million Chinese-Americans

发布时间:2019-01-21

讲座时间:2019年121日 下午15:00 - 16:30

讲座地点:创管学院320会议室

讲座嘉宾:Douglas Almond(哥伦比亚大学教授

邀请人:方汉明


讲座内容简介: 

“Missing girls" suggest a net preference for sons in China and among Chinese immigrants to the West. We consider health at delivery of surviving girls born in the US and find higher rates of low birth weight, congenital anomalies, maternal hypertension, and lower APGAR scores among Chinese Americans (relative to the non-Chinese gender gap). Hospitals spend more on Chinese-American girls, keep them longer following delivery, and perform more medical procedures than expected. Nevertheless, stillbirth and death on the first day of life are more common and Chinese daughters are less likely to be brought back to the hospital following delivery. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to find that son preference may compromise health at birth.


讲座嘉宾简介

Prof. Douglas Almond 's primary research areas are health and applied microeconomics, with a particular interest in infant health and the environment. As a professor (tenured in SIPA and Department of Economics) in Columbia University, he is also a visiting professor of Uppsala University (Sweden), and senior scholar of opportunity & Inclusive Growth Institute: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Almond previously served as a staff economist at the Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton administration and studied the health effects of air pollution in China as a Fulbright scholar.

In 2011 Professor Douglas Almond won Garfield Economic Impact Award (with Doyle, Kowalski and Williams) and HCUP Outstanding Article of the Year Award (with Doyle, Kowalski and Williams). In 2005-2006 he was Fulbright Scholars and spent a year in the China Center for Economic Research of Peking University. In 2002 he was awarded the U.C. Berkeley Department of Economics Award for Public Policy Research.