GLP-1 drugs increase women's marriage and employment rates(hu-my.sharepoint.com)
hu-my.sharepoint.com
GLP-1 drugs increase women's marriage and employment rates
https://hu-my.sharepoint.com/personal/rdiamond_fas_harvard_edu/_layouts/15/onedrive.aspx?id=%2Fpersonal%2Frdiamond%5Ffas%5Fharvard%5Fedu%2FDocuments%2FCombined%5FGLP1%5FLabor%2Epdf&parent=%2Fpersonal%2Frdiamond%5Ffas%5Fharvard%5Fedu%2FDocuments&ga=1
7 comments
You posted a link to a private file in your OneDrive account. You'll need to share it, if you want others to see it: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/onedrive/share-files-and...
OK, these effect sizes are huge. That and the drama of the findings provokes general skepticism. So I welcome some experienced folks picking this apart.
>Single women’s marriage/cohabitation rates rise by 29 percentage points and employment among baseline nonemployed women rises 27 percentage points after six or more quarters.
>Single women’s marriage/cohabitation rates rise by 29 percentage points and employment among baseline nonemployed women rises 27 percentage points after six or more quarters.
SIgh, just seeing the comments here. I get emails for replies to my comments, but not to postings, so never saw these.
The link was one provided by the researcher, but HN stripped out al the params that allowed it to be viewed. I need to remember it does that...
or... HN could be improved a tad, ;-P
I found another article that covers this without a paywall, and will share that.
The link was one provided by the researcher, but HN stripped out al the params that allowed it to be viewed. I need to remember it does that...
or... HN could be improved a tad, ;-P
I found another article that covers this without a paywall, and will share that.
Have a link that doesn’t require a login to Harvard’s sharepoint via entra?
I can't view the link because it's behind a login wall, but the first thing that comes to mind is that GLP-1 drugs aren't covered by most insurance plans and cost several hundred dollars/month out-of-pocket.
so unless I see otherwise, I'm going to assume this is finding "being employed is highly correlated with having $500/mo in disposable income"