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6 years of data from WCM beneficiaries as a predictor of cost and hospitalization
Please cite this dataset as: Mary Charlson, James P. Hollenberg, Martin Wells. (2026) 6 years of data from WCM beneficiaries as a predictor of cost and hospitalization. [Dataset] Cornell University Library eCommons Repository. https://doi.org/10.7298/m0gz-2x49The dataset contains all Weill Cornell health insurance beneficiaries from 2016 through 2021, including employees and their dependents—spouses/partners and children—with at least one submitted claim. Individuals were linked across years using unique de-identified IDs. Beneficiary-level data included year of birth, gender, and beneficiary status (employee, spouse/partner, or child). The claims data encompassed all outpatient and inpatient medical, maternity, behavioral health, and other covered services. Fewer than 0.01% of claims in any given year had service dates more than 12 months prior to the claim year and were excluded from the analysis. Pharmacy claims were not included. Each claim contained the Major Diagnostic Category, the servicing provider’s specialty code, and the line-level procedure code (primarily HCPCS Level I CPT-4). For hospitalizations, admission and discharge dates and the corresponding DRG discharge classifications were recorded. Claims data were used to calculate total payments for services in each year.The authors have no support or funding to report
An Exemption for Exploitation: De Minimis Exemptions and the Challenge to Uphold International Labor Law
Supplementary Index to "Women and Resistance in the 'Annals' of Tacitus"
An index locarum to "Women and Resistance in the 'Annals' of Tacitus," a book which explores how Tacitus often represents a Roman woman's relationship to the imperial household and its members as one of resistance. Throughout his Annals, women discover ways to resist without relying on traditional forms of power. Women engage in political protests, legal disputes, public processions, and subversive religious rituals. They demonstrate resistance in acts of mourning and commemoration and overturn gender stereotypes by enduring pain and displaying courage in death. Tacitus illustrates how women's public movements, rituals, suicides and survivals become sites of resistance and opportunities for civic engagement open to women. Caitlin C. Gillespie situates non-imperial Roman women at the fore, reading them in comparison with Tacitus's narratives of imperial women and hierarchies of power. With this new analytical approach, stereotypes against women are variously confirmed or denied, challenged or evoked as evidence, or employed as a means of attack or defense. Women emerge to claim agency over their bodies, reputations, and actions, and though a vulnerable population, refuse to be passive victims of their circumstances.This document is an index locarum to Women and Resistance in the "Annals" of Tacitus detailing where Greek and Roman authors and their works are mentioned in the book
Remote Work Is Here to Stay: Research-based Recommendations for Protecting Workers’ Mental Health
Research Shows...
- The growth of remote work and advancements in communications technology have prevented workers from separating their home and work lives.
- Employees who choose to work from home tend to have better outcomes than those who are assigned to work from home.
- Working at home during normal hours may increase psychological well-being and job satisfaction for some workers, but working at home outside of regular hours may increase turnover intentions and damage psychological well-being.
- The impacts of the transition to remote work vary across demographic groups.
- Remote employees often experience overwork and isolation. Transitioning to remote work may require changes in mental health accommodations.
- Current labor and employment laws treat homes differently than traditional workplaces, failing to protect remote workers from overwork or preserve their privacy and organizing rights
Testing: Castles, Battlefields, and Continents: A Dataset of Maps from Literature
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Meet the new leader of the Field Crops Pathology Lab at Cornell University
Camilo H. Parada Rojas has joined Cornell University as an assistant professor of field crops pathology with extension responsibilities. He grew up in Colombia and trained as a plant pathologist within the U.S. land-grant system, where he learned to approach disease management through research, extension and direct engagement with growers.This issue of The Manager is published by Progressive Dairy and printing is sponsored by Papillon