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5-year-old boy taken by ICE in Minneapolis being held with father at Texas facility; Kentucky parents worried about losing child care assistance; Mental health advocates: NYS must increase youth investments; MN schools elevate Native American teachings with book series; AI growth raises job loss concerns for Black PA workers.

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Community response grows as immigration enforcement expands, while families, schools, and small businesses feel the strain and members of Congress again battled over how to see the January 6th attack.

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Training to prepare rural students to become physicians has come to Minnesota's countryside, a grassroots effort in Wisconsin aims to bring childcare and senior-living under the same roof and solar power is helping restore Montana s buffalo to feed the hungry.

Keeping Poor White Women Alive

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Wednesday, September 11, 2013   

PHOENIX - The life expectancy of white, female high school dropouts has dropped markedly in the past 20 years, according to researchers in population, human longevity and public health.

Poor, undereducated, white American women can now expect to die five years earlier than the generation before them.

Monica Potts has written an eye-opening article in The American Prospect called "What's Killing Poor White Women?" in which she pulled together the research that has social scientists scrambling to find answers.

"One of the researchers I talked to said that he believes that the root cause was this dramatic increase in the amount of economic and other stressers that that population faces," she said.

Obesity, diabetes, dead-end jobs, low wages, alcohol, drugs such as OxyContin and meth, and bad marriage partners all are being suggested as stress factors.

Potts said there are no simple remedies for whatever it is that's contributing to the decrease in longevity.

"You need many, many interventions," she said. "There are just always going to be people who struggle a lot. And I think that perhaps what's happened is that the world has become maybe even less able to 'catch' those people than they were before."

Studies show that high school dropouts have been affected more than most by the recent proliferation of low-wage, dead-end jobs.

Potts' article is online at prospect.org.


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