Browsing by Subject "Ownership"
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Item Open Access Analysis of educational materials and destruction/opt-out initiatives for storage and use of residual newborn screening samples.(Genet Test Mol Biomarkers, 2010-10) Haga, Susanne BIn recent years, the storage and use of residual newborn screening (NBS) samples has gained attention. To inform ongoing policy discussions, this article provides an update of previous work on new policies, educational materials, and parental options regarding the storage and use of residual NBS samples. A review of state NBS Web sites was conducted for information related to the storage and use of residual NBS samples in January 2010. In addition, a review of current statutes and bills introduced between 2005 and 2009 regarding storage and/or use of residual NBS samples was conducted. Fourteen states currently provide information about the storage and/or use of residual NBS samples. Nine states provide parents the option to request destruction of the residual NBS sample after the required storage period or the option to exclude the sample for research uses. In the coming years, it is anticipated that more states will consider policies to address parental concerns about the storage and use of residual NBS samples. Development of new policies regarding storage and use of residual NBS samples will require careful consideration of impact on NBS programs, parent and provider educational materials, and respect for parents among other issues.Item Open Access Are for-profit hospital conversions harmful to patients and to Medicare?(Rand J Econ, 2002) Picone, Gabriel; Chou, Shin-yi; Sloan, FrankWe examine how changes in hospital ownership to and from for-profit status affect quality and Medicare payments per hospital stay. We hypothesize that hospitals converting to for-profit ownership boost post acquisition profitability by reducing dimensions of quality not readily observed by patients and by raising prices. We find that 1-2 years after conversion to for-profit status, mortality of patients, which is difficult for outsiders to monitor, increases while hospital profitability rises markedly and staffing decreases. Thereafter, the decline in quality is much lower. A similar decline in quality is not observed after hospitals switch from for-profit to government or private nonprofit status.Item Open Access Cost of capital to the hospital sector.(J Health Econ, 1988-03) Sloan, FA; Valvona, J; Hassan, M; Morrisey, MAThis paper provides estimates of the cost of equity and debt capital to for-profit and non-profit hospitals in the U.S. for the years 1972-83. The cost of equity is estimated using, alternatively, the Capital Asset Pricing Model and Arbitrage Pricing Theory. We find that the cost of equity capital, using either model, substantially exceeded anticipated inflation. The cost of debt capital was much lower. Accounting for the corporate tax shield on debt and capital paybacks by cost-based insurers lowered the net cost of capital to hospitals.Item Open Access Costa Rica's payment for environmental services program: intention, implementation, and impact.(Conserv Biol, 2007-10) Sánchez-Azofeifa, G Arturo; Pfaff, Alexander; Robalino, Juan Andres; Boomhower, Judson PWe evaluated the intention, implementation, and impact of Costa Rica's program of payments for environmental services (PSA), which was established in the late 1990s. Payments are given to private landowners who own land in forest areas in recognition of the ecosystem services their land provides. To characterize the distribution of PSA in Costa Rica, we combined remote sensing with geographic information system databases and then used econometrics to explore the impacts of payments on deforestation. Payments were distributed broadly across ecological and socioeconomic gradients, but the 1997-2000 deforestation rate was not significantly lower in areas that received payments. Other successful Costa Rican conservation policies, including those prior to the PSA program, may explain the current reduction in deforestation rates. The PSA program is a major advance in the global institutionalization of ecosystem investments because few, if any, other countries have such a conservation history and because much can be learned from Costa Rica's experiences.Item Open Access Disputes over memory ownership: What memories are disputed?(Genes Brain Behav, 2006) Sheen, M; Kemp, S; Rubin, DCThe ownership of memories is sometimes disputed, particularly by twins. Examination of 77 disputed memories, 71 provided by twins, showed that most of the remembered events are negative and that the disputants appear to be self-serving. They claim for themselves memories for achievements and suffered misfortunes but are more likely to give away memories of personal wrongdoing. The research suggests that some of the memories in which we play a leading role might in fact have been the experiences of others.Item Open Access Economic Channels for Influence Over Governments(2022) McDade, TimothyThis dissertation focuses on how economic markets provide channels for influence over government policy. Specifically, I examine three levels of analysis: the household, the financial security, and the foreign state. Economic constraints on government policy are particularly salient in today's financialized economy. Understanding these dynamics helps us forecast what will happen in the future. Getting these forecasts right is important because taxpayers, governments, and investors all have skin in the game of effective use of government resources. To paint a picture of these constraints, my dissertation contains three papers. The first argues that individuals with access to economic insurance are less likely to protest than those without. Using macroeconomic and survey data, I find evidence supporting my theoretical expectations. The second paper turns from household economics to the financial markets for government debt securities. Although the literature shows how governments make certain choices in debt issuance and the pricing dynamics of government bonds, it remains unclear how the ownership structure of debt affects yields. I argue that government bonds with more concentrated ownership structures have higher price volatility, which should incur volatility risk premium as a result. I find evidence supporting my theoretical expectations. This paper speaks to the relationship between debt ownership and power; it matters because governments with more concentrated debt ownership could see higher debt service payments over time. The third paper considers how state actors can use foreign investment as a policy tool. I argue that Chinese actors increase investment in target countries when future policy is more uncertain because investments act as a hedge against the possibility of unfavorable future policy. This runs counter to the traditional narrative, which suggests that foreign investment is more likely when policy is stable. Using a novel cross-national, high-frequency, machine-coded event data set, I find evidence supporting my expectations. My dissertation paints a picture of the breadth of ways that economic markets influence government policy. Governments contend with the economic interests of constituents who can demonstrate publicly, investors who can affect the price of their debt, and other states that can use investment to secure influence over future policy.
Item Open Access Firearm-Related Laws in All 50 US States, 1991-2016.(American journal of public health, 2017-07) Siegel, Michael; Pahn, Molly; Xuan, Ziming; Ross, Craig S; Galea, Sandro; Kalesan, Bindu; Fleegler, Eric; Goss, Kristin AObjectives
To describe a new database containing detailed annual information on firearm-related laws in place in each of the 50 US states from 1991 to 2016 and to summarize key trends in firearm-related laws during this time period.Methods
Using Thomson Reuters Westlaw data to access historical state statutes and session laws, we developed a database indicating the presence or absence of each of 133 provisions of firearm laws in each state over the 26-year period. These provisions covered 14 aspects of state policies, including regulation of the process by which firearm transfers take place, ammunition, firearm possession, firearm storage, firearm trafficking, and liability of firearm manufacturers.Results
An examination of trends in state firearm laws via this database revealed that although the number of laws nearly doubled during the study period, there was substantial heterogeneity across states, leading to a widening disparity in the number of firearm laws.Conclusions
This database can help advance firearm policy research by providing 26 years of comprehensive policy data that will allow longitudinal panel study designs that minimize the limitations present in many previous studies.Item Open Access Mine or yours? Development of sharing in toddlers in relation to ownership understanding.(Child Dev, 2013-05) Brownell, Celia A; Iesue, Stephanie S; Nichols, Sara R; Svetlova, MargaritaTo examine early developments in other-oriented resource sharing, fifty-one 18- and 24-month-old children were administered 6 tasks with toys or food that could be shared with an adult playmate who had none. On each task the playmate communicated her desire for the items in a series of progressively more explicit cues. Twenty-four-month-olds shared frequently and spontaneously. Eighteen-month-olds shared when given multiple opportunities and when the partner provided enough communicative support. Younger children engaged in self-focused and hypothesis-testing behavior in lieu of sharing more often than did older children. Ownership understanding, separately assessed, was positively associated with sharing and negatively associated with non-sharing behavior, independent of age and language ability.Item Open Access Spatial distribution of bednet coverage under routine distribution through the public health sector in a rural district in Kenya.(PLoS One, 2011) O'Meara, Wendy Prudhomme; Smith, Nathan; Ekal, Emmanuel; Cole, Donald; Ndege, SamsonInsecticide-treated nets (ITNs) are one of the most important and cost-effective tools for malaria control. Maximizing individual and community benefit from ITNs requires high population-based coverage. Several mechanisms are used to distribute ITNs, including health facility-based targeted distribution to high-risk groups; community-based mass distribution; social marketing with or without private sector subsidies; and integrating ITN delivery with other public health interventions. The objective of this analysis is to describe bednet coverage in a district in western Kenya where the primary mechanism for distribution is to pregnant women and infants who attend antenatal and immunization clinics. We use data from a population-based census to examine the extent of, and factors correlated with, ownership of bednets. We use both multivariable logistic regression and spatial techniques to explore the relationship between household bednet ownership and sociodemographic and geographic variables. We show that only 21% of households own any bednets, far lower than the national average, and that ownership is not significantly higher amongst pregnant women attending antenatal clinic. We also show that coverage is spatially heterogeneous with less than 2% of the population residing in zones with adequate coverage to experience indirect effects of ITN protection.Item Open Access Toddlers' costly helping in three societies.(Journal of experimental child psychology, 2020-03-25) Corbit, John; Callaghan, Tara; Svetlova, MargaritaOver the second and third years of life, toddlers begin to engage in helping even when it comes at a personal cost. During this same period, toddlers gain experience of ownership, which may influence their tendency to help at a cost. Whereas costly helping has been studied in Western children, who have ample access to resources, the emergence of costly helping has not been examined in societies where children's experience with ownership is varied and access to resources is scarce. The current study compared the development of toddlers' costly and non-costly helping in three societies within Canada, India, and Peru that differ in these aspects of children's early social experience. In two conditions, 16- to 36-month-olds (N = 100) helped an experimenter by giving either their own items (Costly condition) or the experimenter's items (Non-costly condition). Children's tendency to help increased with age in the Non-costly condition across all three societies. In the Costly condition, in Canada children's tendency to help increased with age, in Peru children's helping remained stable across age, and in India children's level of helping decreased with age. Thus, whereas we replicate the findings that non-costly helping appears to develop synchronously across diverse societies, costly helping may depend on children's early society-specific experiences. We discuss these findings in relation to children's early ownership experience and access to resources, factors that may account for the divergent patterns in the development of costly helping across these societies.Item Open Access USING TAX RECORDS TO TRACK FOREST OWNERSHIP CHANGES: LAKE COUNTY, MINNESOTA 1996-2006(2007-05) Halvorsen, Jessica L.Over time, due to economic and social trends, patterns of forestland ownership change. Because forestland owners have differing goals and levels of forestry expertise, shifts in ownership can affect ecosystems and timber supply. In order to anticipate the effects of ownership change, it is important to track forestland ownership change as it occurs. Completed in collaboration with the University of Minnesota Extension, this master’s project examines changes in forestland ownership in Lake County, Minnesota between 1996 and 2006 by piloting an approach to categorization and analysis of county forestland tax records. Each owner was categorized into an ownership category, such as Corporate and Non-Industrial Private Forest Owner (NIPF). Changes in the acreages for the ownership types were mapped on a section-by-section basis in a geographic information system (GIS). By exploring the resulting maps in concert with the underlying dataset, patterns of forestland ownership, as well as individual land transfers, can be identified. The results of this project reveal the benefits and drawbacks of approaching land ownership change through tax records, while also providing insight into the dynamics of land ownership in Lake County. Forest industry ownership declined dramatically during the 1996-2006 period, and split into the NIPF, Nonprofit, and “Unknown” ownership types. Because of the low spatial resolution possible with this method, it is best used in concert with other investigatory methods.