PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Time limits on welfare can lead to higher mortality rates

Study shows enrollees in family transition program lost 9 months of life expectancy

2013-06-04
(Press-News.org) U.S. workfare programs have been praised by some for cutting welfare rolls and improving the economic well-being of families. But little is known about how these policies affected participants' health and mortality. Researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health studied enrollees in Florida's Family Transition Program who were given a time limit for welfare benefits and exposed to job training. They were compared to a control group who received traditional welfare benefits. In this randomized controlled trial, the researchers found that participants in the Family Transition Program had a 16 percent higher mortality rate compared to recipients of traditional welfare. This translates to nine months of life expectancy lost for people in the experimental program. The study adds to a body of research on the nonmedical determinants of health that are showing a trend of adverse health effects associated with welfare time limits.

The study findings are published in the June issue of the journal Health Affairs.

The Columbia Mailman School analysis studied 3,224 welfare recipients in two sites in a northwest county in Florida, Escambia. Participants who were enrolled in programs between May 1994 and October 1996 were randomly assigned to one of two programs. Participants assigned to the Family Transition Program had time limits on their benefits of either 24 or 36 months and received extra job training and case management. Enrollees in the more traditional Aid to Families with Dependent Children program received regular benefits and no additional job counseling. Members of this control group were significantly more likely to be under the age of 20 (6.2 percent versus 8.1 percent), less likely to be Hispanic (0.7 percent versus 1.5 percent), and less likely to be living in emergency or temporary housing (4.0 percent versus 5.6 percent).

The research team, led by Peter Muennig, MD, MPH, associate professor of Health Policy and Management, found that while participants in the Family Transition Program were substantially more likely to find work than participants in the control group, some of these families did not and therefore struggled to make ends meet by living with friends or relatives.

"This suggests that some people in the experimental group may have experienced psychological stress, food insecurity, and other hardships as a result of the time limits on their welfare eligibility," noted Dr. Muennig. These factors can have an adverse effect on health. "However, there are several other ways in which welfare reform may have influenced health. Employment itself can pose health threats through commutes to work and exposures to dangerous substances or machinery at the workplace."

The investigators pointed out that one limitation of the study was its generalizability. The generalizability problem was partially addressed by looking at another county in Florida that was not included in the original study. While this latter study was not included in the main analysis because it was poorly documented, it showed even greater mortality effect. The researchers also conducted a separate study of an experiment in another state, Connecticut. While the population sample was smaller in the Connecticut study, the findings indicated that mortality risks were even higher among those who experienced time limits to welfare. The results of the Connecticut study recently appeared in the Online First version of the American Journal of Public Health.

The researchers also were unable to determine whether mortality was higher among those who did actually become employed. According to Dr. Muennig, "this is particularly important if we are to understand whether psychological stress or employment played a role in the increased mortality we observed. Although the numbers of deaths in both the experimental and control groups were small, the differences in mortality that we observed were significant."

### About Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health Founded in 1922 as one of the first three public health academies in the nation, Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health pursues an agenda of research, education, and service to address the critical and complex public health issues affecting New Yorkers, the nation and the world. The Mailman School is the third largest recipient of NIH grants among schools of public health. Its over 450 multi-disciplinary faculty members work in more than 100 countries around the world, addressing such issues as preventing infectious and chronic diseases, environmental health, maternal and child health, health policy, climate change & health, and public health preparedness. It is a leader in public health education with over 1,300 graduate students from more than 40 nations pursuing a variety of master's and doctoral degree programs. The Mailman School is also home to numerous world-renowned research centers including the International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs (ICAP), the National Center for Disaster Preparedness, and the Center for Infection and Immunity. For more information, please visit http://www.mailman.columbia.edu


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Smoking, sugar, spirits and 'sin' taxes: Higher price would help health, Mayo Clinic doctors say

2013-06-04
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Go ye and sin no more -- or pay for it, when it comes to junk food, smoking and consuming alcohol. That's the message from two Mayo Clinic physicians who say raising "sin" taxes on tobacco and alcoholic beverages and imposing them on sugary drinks and fatty foods would lead many people to cut back, improving public health. The article by Michael Joyner, M.D., and David Warner, M.D., appears in the June issue of the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings. The physicians contend that much of overall health depends on behavior and is relatively independent of ...

Berkeley Lab researchers unlock mystery behind dormant breast tumor cells that become metastatic

2013-06-04
The long-standing mystery behind dormant disseminated breast tumor cells and what activates them after years and even decades of latency may have been solved. Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have identified the microenvironment surrounding microvasculature – the small blood vessels that transport blood within tissues – as a niche where dormant cancer cells reside. When these blood vessels begin to sprout, the new tips produce molecules that transform dormant cancer cells into metastatic tumors. In ...

Rash decision? New UK coins increase nickel skin allergy risk 4 fold

2013-06-04
In a bid to save £10 million a year the British Treasury is replacing copper–nickel five and ten pence coins with new nickel-plated steel versions. However, while no UK health assessment has taken place, scientists in Sweden have analyzed the allergy risk after the Swedish state bank announced it will reduce traces of nickel in Swedish coinage. The assessment, published in Contact Dermatitis reveals that the UK public's exposure to nickel allergic reactions will increase four fold. The team analyzes skin exposure and metal release in artificial sweat to find that the ...

Large multi-generational family helps unlock genetic secrets to developmental dysplasia of the hip

2013-06-04
(PHILADELPHIA) – Research from Thomas Jefferson University is laying the foundation for a genetic test to accurately identify hip dysplasia in newborns so that early intervention can be initiated to promote normal development. This research from Jefferson Orthopedics physician-scientists is currently available in the Journal of Bone and Mineralizing Research (JBMR) online at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbmr.1999/abstract. The researchers studied four generations of a Utah family affected by developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) in most generations. ...

12 million bednets and innovative thinking make Ghana malaria partnership a success

2013-06-04
In a report to be released this month, the Promoting Malaria Prevention and Treatment (ProMPT) Project will describe an innovative model for distributing over 12 million mosquito nets to prevent the transmission of malaria in Ghana. In collaboration with the Ghana Health Service (GHS), and funding from the US Agency for international Development (USAID), the four year long project ensured that millions of households learned how to use nets treated with insecticide to kill mosquitoes, which can transmit malaria. The $20 million project, funded through the United States ...

American, Nepalese children disagree on social obligations with age

2013-06-04
ITHACA, N.Y. – Preschoolers universally recognize that one's choices are not always free – that our decisions may be constrained by social obligations to be nice to others or follow rules set by parents or elders, even when wanting to do otherwise. As they age, however, American kids are more prone to acknowledge one's freedom to act against such obligations compared to Nepalese children, who are less willing to say that people can and will violate social codes, finds a cross-cultural study by Cornell University development psychologists published in the current issue ...

Researchers discover a new way fish camouflage themselves in the ocean

2013-06-04
Fish can hide in the open ocean by manipulating how light reflects off their skin, according to researchers at The University of Texas at Austin. The discovery could someday lead to the development of new camouflage materials for use in the ocean, and it overturns 40 years of conventional wisdom about fish camouflage. The researchers found that lookdown fish camouflage themselves through a complex manipulation of polarized light after it strikes the fishes' skin. In laboratory studies, they showed that this kind of camouflage outperforms by up to 80 percent the "mirror" ...

Tiger moths: Mother Nature's fortune tellers

2013-06-04
(WINSTON-SALEM, NC, June 3, 2013) – When it comes to saving its own hide, the tiger moth can predict the future. A new study by researchers at Wake Forest University shows Bertholdia trigona, a species of tiger moth found in the Arizona desert, can tell if an echo-locating bat is going to attack it well before the predator swoops in for the kill – making the intuitive, tiny-winged insect a master of self-preservation. Predators in the night A bat uses sonar to hunt at night. The small mammal emits a series of ultrasonic cries and listens carefully to the echoes ...

DFG establishes 12 new collaborative research centers

2013-06-04
This news release is available in German. The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) is to establish 12 new Collaborative Research Centres (CRCs). This was decided by the responsible Grants Committee during its spring session in Bonn. The new CRCs will receive a total of 94 million euros for an initial period of three years and nine months. There will also be a 20% programme allowance for indirect project costs. The new CRCs cover a wide range of topics, including the sociocultural importance of oil, metals, food and other natural resources ...

New explanation for slow earthquakes on San Andreas

2013-06-04
New Zealand's geologic hazards agency reported this week an ongoing, "silent" earthquake that began in January is still going strong. Though it is releasing the energy equivalent of a 7.0 earthquake, New Zealanders can't feel it because its energy is being released over a long period of time, therefore slow, rather than a few short seconds. These so-called "slow slip events" are common at subduction zone faults – where an oceanic plate meets a continental plate and dives beneath it. They also occur on continents along strike-slip faults like California's San Andreas, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New method probes cancer cell messengers that weaken immune system

VCs backed Black founders after BLM – but it didn’t last

A new tool to track infant development, starting at just 16 days old

Generative AI uncovers undetected bird flu exposure risks in Maryland emergency departments

High concentration THC associated with schizophrenia, psychosis, and other unfavorable mental health outcomes

Mediterranean diet with fewer calories and exercise lowers diabetes risk by 31%

Mediterranean diet combined with calorie reduction and exercise may reduce risk of type 2 diabetes by nearly one-third

Researchers to gather next week for 10th Peer Review Congress

Rising deep-ocean oxygen levels opened up new marine habitats, spurred speciation

Melanie Cocco named as next Editor-in-Chief of Biophysical Reports

Polysubstance involvement in youth opioid overdoses increases with age

Brain’s blood flow could change how we understand and treat Alzheimer’s

Mount Sinai scientists create AI-powered tool to improve cancer tissue analysis

Scientists discover how cells use a secret weapon to fight off some pathogens

Research uncovers why IBD causes blood clots—and how to prevent them

Having a sense of purpose may protect against dementia

Trump shooting and Biden exit flipped social media from hostility to solidarity – study

New discovery of wild cereal foraging – a precursor to agriculture – far from the fertile crescent

Flamingos reveal their secret to ageing

An early sign of cognitive decline in aging populations

Neural activity linked to self-preoccupied thinking

The NSF Inouye Solar Telescope delivers record-breaking images of solar flare, coronal loops

Including more females in cardiac device trials benefits all patients

The number of people exposed to wildfires nearly doubles, with Africa bearing the greatest burden

Most epilepsy patients wait a year after starting treatment for seizure relief

Molecular ‘brake’ in brain development could hold key to treating multiple sclerosis

Digital to analog in one smooth step

Researchers find link between history of traumatic brain injury and development of malignant brain tumor

Proportion of obesity-related conditions attributable to obesity and overweight in US youth

Testing bidirectional associations between maternal and child depression during emerging adolescence

[Press-News.org] Time limits on welfare can lead to higher mortality rates
Study shows enrollees in family transition program lost 9 months of life expectancy