Selected article for: "baseline mortality and mortality rate"

Author: Guojun He; Yuhang Pan; Takanao Tanaka
Title: COVID-19, City Lockdown, and Air Pollution: Evidence from China
  • Document date: 2020_4_1
  • ID: if7av1x8_64
    Snippet: The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is . https://doi.org/10. 1101 Notes: Weather controls include weekly mean temperature, its square, weekly mean precipitation, and weekly mean snow depth. Standard errors are clustered at the city level and reported below the coefficients. * significant at 10% ** significant at 5%. *** significant at 1%. (1) to (4). In Column (1), the elasticity indicates the extent to which a 10.....
    Document: The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not peer-reviewed) is . https://doi.org/10. 1101 Notes: Weather controls include weekly mean temperature, its square, weekly mean precipitation, and weekly mean snow depth. Standard errors are clustered at the city level and reported below the coefficients. * significant at 10% ** significant at 5%. *** significant at 1%. (1) to (4). In Column (1), the elasticity indicates the extent to which a 10 µg/m 3 change in PM2.5 concentration affects the mortality rate. Column (2) summarizes estimated changes in PM2.5 in different types of cities based on Table 1 . In Column (4), we obtain China's annual death rate from World Development Indicators and divide it by 12 to obtain the monthly death rate. As we do not have city-level mortality rate, in this calculation, we assume that the baseline mortality rate is the same across cities.

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