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Displaying 10 of 175 matching citations.

Frisbie, W. Parker; Hummer, Robert A.; Durden, T. Elizabeth; & Cho YoungTae (2007). Health Patterns of Pacific Islanders and Asians in the United States.. Ohtsuka, Ryutaro & Ulijaszek, Stanley J. (Eds.) (pp. 192-218). New York: Cambridge University Press.

Hummer, Robert A. (2007). Immigration, Race/Ethnicity, and Health Care (Commentary).. Schaie, K. Warner & Uhlenberg, Peter (Eds.) (pp. 170-178). New York: Springer Publishing Company.

Hummer, Robert A. & Lindsey, Nicole (2007). Government Health Surveys.. Markides, Kyriakos S. (Ed.) (pp. 249-251). Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications.

Hummer, Robert A.; Powers, Daniel A.; Pullum, Starling G.; Gossman, Ginger L.; & Frisbie, W. Parker (2007). Paradox Found (Again): Infant Mortality among the Mexican-Origin Population in the United States. Demography, 44(3), 441-457. PMCID: PMC2031221

McKinnon, Sarah A. & Hummer, Robert A. (2007). Education and Mortality Risk among Hispanic Adults in the United States.. Angel, Jacqueline L. & Whitfield, Keith E. (Eds.) (pp. 65-84). New York: Springer Science + Business Media.

Durden, T. Elizabeth & Hummer, Robert A. (2006). Access to Healthcare among Working-Aged Hispanic Adults in the United States. Social Science Quarterly, 87(5), 1319-1343.

Hamilton, Erin R.; Hummer, Robert A.; You, Xiuhong H.; & Padilla, Yolanda C. (2006). Health Insurance and Health-Care Utilization of U.S.-Born Mexican-American Children. Social Science Quarterly, 87(5), 1280-1294.

Padilla, Yolanda C.; Radey, Melissa Dalton; Hummer, Robert A.; & Kim, Eunjeong (2006). The Living Conditions of U.S.-Born Children of Mexican Immigrants in Unmarried Families. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 28(3), 331-349.

Powers, Daniel A.; Frisbie, W. Parker; Hummer, Robert A.; Pullum, Starling G.; & Solis, Patricio (2006). Race/Ethnic Differences and Age-Variation in the Effects of Birth Outcomes on Infant Mortality in the U.S.. Demographic Research, 14(10), 179-216.

Hummer, Robert A. (2005). Commentary: Understanding Religious Involvement and Mortality Risk in the United States: Comment on Bagiella, Hong, and Sloan. International Journal of Epidemiology, 34(2), 452-453.