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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Applied Micro Seminar speaker Julie Cullen will present her pap
 er in progress titled "Direct and\nspillover effects of vaccine-hesitant p
 roviders."&nbsp\;The seminar will explore the role that physicians play in
  moderating the take-up of vaccines for their own patients and their patie
 nts' social networks. Using Danish administrative data on the universe of 
 Danish children and their healthcare providers\, we first construct a meas
 ure of providers' propensity to vaccinate based on a two-way fixed effect 
 model. We then show that the constructed measure of provider propensity to
  administer childhood vaccines directly affects take-up of the Human Papil
 lomavirus (HPV) vaccine among adolescent patients. Finally\, this seminar 
 will demonstrate that vaccine-hesitant providers affect the take-up decisi
 ons beyond those of their own patients. Specifically\, having at least one
  classmate with a provider in the bottom quartile of he propensity distrib
 ution reduces the probability of getting the HPV vaccine by about 0.9 perc
 entage points.&nbsp\;Please contact Emily O'Brien (eobrie08@syr.edu) for a
 dditional information.Sponsored by the Economics Department
DTEND:20200311T163000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T050026Z
DTSTART:20200311T150000Z
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SUMMARY:Applied Micro Seminar: Julie Cullen
UID:RFCALITEM639140580260030957
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Applied Micro Seminar speaker Julie Cullen 
 will present her paper in progress titled "Direct and\nspillover effects o
 f vaccine-hesitant providers."&nbsp\;The seminar will explore the role tha
 t physicians play in moderating the take-up of vaccines for their own pati
 ents and their patients' social networks. Using Danish administrative data
  on the universe of Danish children and their healthcare providers\, we fi
 rst construct a measure of providers' propensity to vaccinate based on a t
 wo-way fixed effect model. We then show that the constructed measure of pr
 ovider propensity to administer childhood vaccines directly affects take-u
 p of the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine among adolescent patients. Fin
 ally\, this seminar will demonstrate that vaccine-hesitant providers affec
 t the take-up decisions beyond those of their own patients. Specifically\,
  having at least one classmate with a provider in the bottom quartile of h
 e propensity distribution reduces the probability of getting the HPV vacci
 ne by about 0.9 percentage points.&nbsp\;</p><p><br>Please contact Emily O
 'Brien (eobrie08@syr.edu) for additional information.</p><p><br><em>Sponso
 red by the Economics Department</em></p>
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