Nathan E Botts
/ Categories: Personal Health Data

Decline of median income stats are in – will anybody notice the 65+?

Consider the data, check elsewhere, and discard this report. This kind of thing catches my eye. You know by now which single age demographic income group saw a statistically significant increase in median income since the recession (supposedly) ended in 2007. The New York Times helpfully tells us – it was those 65-74 folk. Says the Times insightfully: “helped perhaps by the decision of some older workers to remain in the work force or re-enter it.”  A long way down in the article, we learn that the 5.1 percent increase for those 65-74 put them at a median income of $43,000 -- the national median rose to $52,100 in June -- even though in many cases the head of the household was retired. Guess those 65+ must be doing okay.

read more

Link to original article

Previous Article For tech marketers -- functionality matters more than demographics
Next Article Will Digital Health help close the Care Gap?
Print
1925 Rate this article:
No rating
0Upvote 0Downvote
Please login or register to post comments.
All information, thought, and references provided on Health eConsultation is intended for informational and educational purposes only. Health eConsutlation currently makes no attempt at HIPAA privacy compliance. Any trade names used are information and details given for the convenience of users and do not constitute an endorsement from Health eConsultation.
Use this site at your own risk, and do not use the information to make medical or legal decisions without first seeking guidance from a medical or legal professional.
Plain and simple, ads are used to help pay for the cost of the server and resources required to serve Health eConsultation members and provide an objective resource of health information and health education. Subscribers of Health eConsultation can access the site without having to view ads.
OUR SERVICES
We are passionate about the therapeutic benefits that can be derived from appropriately applied health education .
More informed patients are healthier and less costly to provide care to.
We seek to give consumers and patients a voice, because in the end we are them.
Evidence based practices is what nurtures a thriving health system.

HEALTH IT EDUCATION - KNOWLEDGE IS POWER

 
WHO WE ARE
Health eConsultation members believe that health improvement is about patient knowledge, motivation and opportunity to act in concert with healthcare professionals to improve their condition.
OUR PURPOSE
Our primary purpose is to build a community around unbiased Health IT education so that people are able to focus on the information they need without having to navigate the vast amount of information that is available on the web.
LEVERAGE VS BUILD
Health eConsultation seeks to leverage responsible, engaging and, hopefully, motivating education, and information resources. The idea is not to scrape the content of other sites, but to investigate, synthesize, and report in order to create an evidence-base founded on increased rigor and research.
RESOURCES & REFERENCES
Health eConsultation educational material and website information are provided primarily through free resources, although some sites mentioned might require further registration and payment for particular membership or services.
DISCLAIMER
All information, thought, and references provided on Health eConsultation is intended for informational and educational purposes only. Health eConsutlation currently makes no attempt at HIPAA privacy compliance. Use this site at your own risk, and do not use the information to make medical decisions without first seeking guidance from a medical professonal.
CUSTOMIZED LEARNING
By registering with Health eConsultation you can participate in comments, ratings, and bookmarking. You can also keep track of the time that you spend learning about certain topics for your own records or to share whith health professionals you are working with.