Quantitative Methods and Data Analysis in Applied Demography - Volume 1

£119.50

Quantitative Methods and Data Analysis in Applied Demography - Volume 1

Health, Mortality and Covid-19

Population and demography Public health and preventive medicine Probability and statistics

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Collection: The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 30th July 2025

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9783031822759


Introduction

This first volume of two provides quantitative techniques to estimate the healthy life years lost by expanding the classical life tables to include the proportion with disability calculated from life tables, along with a final part using the Sullivan method. The provided templates apply immediately to the life tables from the WHO, HMD, Eurostat and other life table providers. Furthermore, the possibility of creating new health indicators is explored along with Covid-19 pandemic management.

Content Overview

A part of this book is devoted to mortality, epidemic models, and comparative studies in Czehia, Greece, and the EU. Data analysis and artificial intelligence methods are included to apply in demographic and Cox regression and gender differences and the gender gap in EU. Mortality is tested with support methodology, while the gender gap is extensively analyzed and tested in several countries.

Case Studies and Applications

The post Covid-19 cases are tested, including mortality and economic implications for cases from China, Greece, and Czechia. The stochastic behavior of Epstein-Barr Virus is explored and a case study on heterochronous Maltese SARS-CoV-2 genomic data is presented. Leonhard Euler’s research on the multiplication of the human race with models of population growth is also reviewed.

Conclusion

By providing a methodology to cope with health and mortality problems in demography and society in Volume 1 and quantifying important health parameters in Volume 2, the books are a valuable guide for researchers, theoreticians, and practitioners from various disciplines and especially applied demographers, health scientists, statisticians, economists, and sociologists.

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