*New* The Population Reference Bureau Can Help Publicize Your CSDE-Related Research
Posted: 2/5/2026 ()

Graduate students and affiliates, CSDE would like to highlight your research through our partnership with the Population Reference Bureau (PRB) and its Center for Public Information on Population Research. Please let us help you do that. Contact csde-prgm-coord@uw.edu with an idea for a research story and we’ll help get it started! You can see recent examples of their write-ups in this story (click read more). The topics are varied and the briefs are short. Look forward to hearing from you!
- Why Americans Are Delaying Parenthood: Four studies offer new insights on the decision to have kids in a low birth rate era.
- Childhood Adversity Casts a Long Shadow on the Health of LGBTQ+ Youth: New data on adverse experiences and gender identity reveal troubling disparities among U.S. high schoolers
- Which Investment Offers a 60-Fold Return? Food Stamps: For the youngest Americans, $1 of SNAP payments generates $62+ in economic and health benefits.
- Families With Nonstandard Work Schedules Face ‘Pattern of Disadvantage’: Mothers with less education are more likely to work jobs that fall outside the typical 9-to-5 schedule. This can have negative effects on their children’s behavior and development.
- Homelessness Is Hard on Health. Unsheltered Homelessness Is Worse—and It’s on the Rise: More Americans are sleeping in places not meant for human habitation, putting them at risk for chronic disease, mental health and substance use issues, and early death.
- For Homeless Youth, Is Poor Health Just a Matter of Time?: A new study finds that the longer young adults spend unsheltered, the more likely they are to report poor health outcomes.
- Wildfires Devastated Their Communities. Will Californians Stay Put?: Recent research about migration patterns after the most destructive wildfires may help us predict what happens next.
- In the Battle for Time, Exercise Beats Sleep for American Adults: Parents get less sleep than nonparents but still squeeze in workouts, study suggests.
- Vaccination During Pregnancy May Reduce Whooping Cough in Infants: Study finds drop in infant cases after experts promote vaccination for pregnant women.