
Irene Papanicolas
Managing Editor at Health Policy
Prof of Health Services, Policy and Practice @Brown_SPH | @LSEHealthPolicy | Visiting Scientist @HarvardChanSPH 2015-2016 Harkness Fellow
Articles
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1 week ago |
principia-scientific.com | Sara Machado |Irene Papanicolas
Written by Sara Machado and Irene N. Papanicolas on April 17, 2025. Posted in Current News A New England Journal of Medicine study found clear longevity differences between Americans and Europeans across wealth levels.
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1 week ago |
fhicommunications.com | Sara Machado |Irene Papanicolas
~~~~~Americans at all wealth levels are more likely to die sooner than their European counterparts, with even the richest U.S. citizens living shorter lives than northern and western Europeans. That is the key finding of our new study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine. We also found that while the wealthiest Americans live longer than the poorest, the wealth-mortality gap in the U.S. is far more pronounced than in Europe.
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2 weeks ago |
msn.com | Irene Papanicolas |Sara Machado
Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.
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2 weeks ago |
msn.com | Irene Papanicolas |Sara Machado
Microsoft Cares About Your PrivacyMicrosoft and our third-party vendors use cookies to store and access information such as unique IDs to deliver, maintain and improve our services and ads. If you agree, MSN and Microsoft Bing will personalise the content and ads that you see. You can select ‘I Accept’ to consent to these uses or click on ‘Manage preferences’ to review your options and exercise your right to object to Legitimate Interest where used.
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2 weeks ago |
theconversation.com | Sara Machado |Irene Papanicolas
Americans at all wealth levels are more likely to die sooner than their European counterparts, with even the richest U.S. citizens living shorter lives than northern and western Europeans. That is the key finding of our new study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine. We also found that while the wealthiest Americans live longer than the poorest, the wealth-mortality gap in the U.S. is far more pronounced than in Europe.
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