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1 ter improvements in glycemic control for the less educated.
2 ations, earning lower incomes, and among the less educated.
3 e aged >=65 years ($408), blacks ($320), the less educated ($392), and those with Medicare ($481) or
4 2.4%] vs 4944 women [33.9%] aged <30 years), less educated (4281 women [32.5%] vs 5821 women [39.9%]
5 current and 2-year lagged minimum wage among less-educated adults overall and by sex, race/ethnicity,
7 e-aged), and socioeconomic status (higher in less educated and low-income individuals and manual work
9 who were underweight, African-American, and less educated and subjects who had higher depressive sym
10 rrently unmarried, socioeconomically poorer, less educated and urban resident older people that can i
12 lacks compared with Whites, deaths among the less educated, and deaths outside a hospital were more s
13 disparities remain, especially for the poor, less educated, and ethnic minority groups in remote area
14 up reported more financial difficulties, was less educated, and had a higher proportion of children w
15 articipants from Barcelona smoked more, were less educated, and had lower baseline neuropsychological
16 171; CHU = 162), mothers of CHEU were older, less educated, and had lower wealth than mothers of CHU.
17 more common among African-American, younger, less educated, and lower-income individuals and women-gr
18 B37 knowledge especially among lower income, less educated, and minority patients, may potentially ov
19 h were the most vulnerable, typically older, less educated, and more likely to live in more deprived
22 sted rates were lower (p < 0.001) in poorer, less educated, and socially disadvantaged groups, as wel
23 ng mothers who were US born, single parents, less educated, and those with publicly insured or uninsu
24 so increased among women who were non-White, less educated, and unmarried; whose pregnancy was uninte
29 vere obstetric complications were poorer and less educated at baseline than were women with uncomplic
31 s in occupation or levels of obesity for the less educated, but fits a more general pattern seen in t
34 merican compared with white and other races, less educated, current smokers, nonsupplement users, and
36 ts of education on lowering fertility, these less-educated female cohorts were also more vulnerable t
37 Thus, the gap in pain between the more and less educated has widened in each successive birth cohor
38 1C >/= 6.5% were older and more likely to be less educated, have nonwhite ethnicity, be obese, and ha
39 n Cambodia: 0.023, 95% CI 0.022, 0.024), the less educated (highest in Djibouti: - 0.232, 95% CI - 0.
40 ses are up to 60% larger among students from less-educated homes, confirming worries about the uneven
42 Blacks, Latinos, intravenous drug users, and less educated individuals need advance care planning int
43 prevalence of tobacco use were higher among less-educated individuals and individuals with low incom
44 ntation of tobacco control measures to reach less-educated individuals and individuals with low incom
45 ltivariate analyses, older (> or =65 years), less educated (< high school graduate), and light smoker
46 cide attempts were in younger birth cohorts, less educated, Midwest residents, and had 1 or more Diag
49 ssociation between BFP and SGA, except among less educated mothers, who had a reduced risk of SGA (OR
50 health and other resources, we expected that less-educated mothers and black mothers would be more ex
52 ess likely for men and those who were black, less educated, or younger than 30 or older than 59 years
53 was older (M = 47 vs. 39 years, P = 0.003), less educated (P = 0.02), more likely female (P = 0.04),
55 -Black, lived in nonintact families, and had less educated parents were especially at risk of marijua
63 k people, rural residents, religious people, less educated people and people with lower economic stat
64 Conversely, older, married or widowed, and less educated people attended religious services more of
65 in the same region, as well as with poorer, less educated people living in traditional rural communi
68 e people and those living in lower income or less educated regions remained more likely to have stage
69 pairment, 1.76 [CI, 1.34 to 2.32]); who were less educated (RR = 1.30 [CI, 1.02 to 1.67]); and who we
73 s tended to be younger, women, noncaucasian, less educated, unmarried, less likely to have health ins
74 smoking, low socioeconomic status and being less educated were all frequently and consistently found
75 ed using alcohol, being African American and less educated were associated with binge drinking, but r
77 the former received less prenatal care, were less educated, were more frequently transferred from oth
78 significantly higher among older, nonwhite, less educated women and those with greater comorbidity,
79 r in mothers <= 24 years (p = 0.044) and the less educated women had a higher prevalence of placental
81 rectomy and/or oophorectomy (higher odds for less educated women) and those with intact reproductive
86 her education had lower mortality risks than less-educated women, except first-day and early neonatal
87 eight infants born to disadvantaged (single, less educated) women, particularly for deaths from conge
88 well as increased exposures for nonwhite and less educated workers relative to the national average.