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Aaron Hagedorn

Researcher at University of Texas at Arlington

Publications -  14
Citations -  462

Aaron Hagedorn is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Arlington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Life expectancy. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications receiving 397 citations. Previous affiliations of Aaron Hagedorn include University of Southern California.

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Change in Disability-Free Life Expectancy for Americans 70 Years Old and Older

TL;DR: Results indicate the importance of efforts both to prevent and delay disability and to promote recovery from disability for increasing life expectancy without disability, and that declining mortality among the disabled has been a force toward increasing disability prevalence.
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Estimation of multi-state life table functions and their variability from complex survey data using the SPACE program

TL;DR: This paper presents the SPACE (Stochastic Population Analysis for Complex Events) program, a program to estimate MSLT functions and their sampling variability, which has several advantages over other programs, including the use of micro-simulation and the bootstrap method to estimate the variance of MS LT functions.
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Life With and Without Disease: Women Experience More of Both

TL;DR: Women live more years with each of the diseases examined, and, for arthritis, the extended years with disease are greatest, while men spend more years of their lives overweight and have fewer years during which they see a doctor.
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A tale of two countries--the United States and Japan: are differences in health due to differences in overweight?

TL;DR: Being overweight or obese appears to be related to more functioning problems and arthritis in the US than in Japan, and the conditions associated with poor health differ in the United States and Japan.
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A Comparison of Biological Risk Factors in Two Populations: The United States and Japan

TL;DR: The prevalence of clinically recognized risk factors in the two countries was compared to explore the possibility that differences in these likely precursors to disease and death are linked to the paths to higher mortality for Americans.