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  1. The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) is the primary federal entity for collecting and analyzing education data in the United States and other nations. View and use publications and data products on education information.

  2. As of April 2022—about 2 years after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States—69 percent of public schools reported an increase in mental health concerns among their students. 1 This Fast Fact examines the prevalence of mental health services in schools as well as the major limitations on schools’ efforts to provide mental heal...

  3. NCES activities are designed to address high-priority education data needs; provide consistent, reliable, complete, and accu-rate indicators of education status and trends; and report timely, useful, and high-quality data to the U.S. Department of Education, the Congress, the states, other education policymakers, practitioners, data users, and t...

    • 1MB
    • Kutner M, Greenberg E, Jin Y, Paulsen C
    • 76
    • 2006
  4. 40% of adults had obesity in 2021–2023. Explore our data. Data Query System. Thousands of estimates on more than 120 health topics in one easy-to-use tool. Publications. Analysis of timely, accurate data to increase understanding of American health. Linked Data. Connected data from multiple sources to help answer complex health questions.

  5. Medical Research Initiatives. Precision Medicine Initiative, The BRAIN Initiative, Accelerating Medicines Partnership, Rigor and Reproducibility, Data Science at NIH, and more.

  6. Apr 1, 2018 · The FCT posits that social factors such as education are ‘fundamental’ causes of health and disease because they determine access to a multitude of material and non-material resources such as income, safe neighborhoods, or healthier lifestyles, all of which protect or enhance health.

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  8. May 16, 2023 · The study, funded by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD), part of the National Institutes of Health, revealed that in 2018, racial and ethnic health disparities cost the U.S. economy $451 billion, a 41% increase from the previous estimate of $320 billion in 2014.

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