analyze the health and retirement study (hrs) with r the hrs is the one and only longitudinal survey of american seniors. with a panel starting its third decade, the current pool of respondents includes older folks who have been interviewed every two years as far back as 1992. unlike cross-sectional or shorter panel surveys, respondents keep responding until, well, death d o us part. paid for by the national institute on aging and administered by the university of michigan's institute for social research, if you apply for an interviewer job with them, i hope you like werther's original. figuring out how to analyze this data set might trigger your fight-or-flight synapses if you just start clicking arou nd on michigan's website. instead, read pages numbered 10-17 (pdf pages 12-19) of this introduction pdf and don't touch the data until you understand figure a-3 on that last page. if you start enjoying yourself, here's the whole book. after that, it's time to register for access to the (free) data. keep your username and password handy, you'll need it for the top of the download automation r script. next, look at this data flowchart to get an idea of why the data download page is such a righteous jungle. but wait, good news: umich recently farmed out its data management to the rand corporation, who promptly constructed a giant consolidated file with one record per respondent across the whole panel. oh so beautiful. the rand hrs files make much of the older data and syntax examples obsolete, so when you come across stuff like instructions on how to merge years, you can happily ignore them - rand has done it for you. the health and retirement study only includes noninstitutionalized adults when new respondents get added to the panel (as they were in 1992, 1993, 1998, 2004, and 2010) but once they're in, they're in - respondents have a weight of zero for interview waves when they were nursing home residents; but they're still responding and will continue to contribute to your statistics so long as you're generalizing about a population from a previous wave (for example: it's possible to compute "among all americans who were 50+ years old in 1998, x% lived in nursing homes by 2010"). my source for that 411? page 13 of the design doc. wicked. this new github repository contains five scripts: 1992 - 2010 download HRS microdata.R loop through every year and every file, download, then unzip everything in one big party impor t longitudinal RAND contributed files.R create a SQLite database (.db) on the local disk load the rand, rand-cams, and both rand-family files into the database (.db) in chunks (to prevent overloading ram) longitudinal RAND - analysis examples.R connect to the sql database created by the 'import longitudinal RAND contributed files' program create tw o database-backed complex sample survey object, using a taylor-series linearization design perform a mountain of analysis examples with wave weights from two different points in the panel import example HRS file.R load a fixed-width file using only the sas importation script directly into ram with < a href="http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2012/07/importing-public-data-with-sas-instructions-into-r.html">SAScii parse through the IF block at the bottom of the sas importation script, blank out a number of variables save the file as an R data file (.rda) for fast loading later replicate 2002 regression.R connect to the sql database created by the 'import longitudinal RAND contributed files' program create a database-backed complex sample survey object, using a taylor-series linearization design exactly match the final regression shown in this document provided by analysts at RAND as an update of the regression on pdf page B76 of this document . click here to view these five scripts for more detail about the health and retirement study (hrs), visit: michigan's hrs homepage rand's hrs homepage the hrs wikipedia page a running list of publications using hrs notes: exemplary work making it this far. as a reward, here's the detailed codebook for the main rand hrs file. note that rand also creates 'flat files' for every survey wave, but really, most every analysis you c an think of is possible using just the four files imported with the rand importation script above. if you must work with the non-rand files, there's an example of how to import a single hrs (umich-created) file, but if you wish to import more than one, you'll have to write some for loops yourself. confidential to sas, spss, stata, and sudaan users: a tidal wave is coming. you can get water up your nose and be dragged out to sea, or you can grab a surf board. time to transition to r. :D
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees, Private Education and Health Services (AWHAEEHS) from Mar 2006 to Jul 2025 about health, education, hours, establishment survey, services, employment, and USA.
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Download service in the OGC WFS standard used to publish the boundaries of local zoning plans of the municipality of Hourzianów (101503_2). The service allows you to view data in vector form (GML).
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of Production Employees: Education and Health Services: Hospitals in Michigan (SMU26000006562200007) from Jan 2003 to Jun 2025 about hospitals, health, MI, hours, production, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees, Private Education and Health Services (CEU6500000002) from Mar 2006 to Jun 2025 about health, establishment survey, hours, education, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services: Private Education and Health Services in Michigan (SMU26000006500000002) from Jan 2007 to Jun 2025 about health, MI, education, hours, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of Production Employees: Health Care and Social Assistance in Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, MI (MD) (DISCONTINUED) (SMU26476446562000007) from Jan 2003 to Dec 2014 about social assistance, health, hours, production, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in Montana (SMU30000006500000002A) from 2007 to 2024 about MT, health, hours, education, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of Production Employees: Education and Health Services: Health Care and Social Assistance in Detroit-Dearborn-Livonia, MI (MD) (SMU26198046562000007) from Jan 2003 to Jun 2025 about social assistance, health, hours, production, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of Production Employees: Education and Health Services: Health Care and Social Assistance in Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI (MSA) (SMU26198206562000007) from Jan 2003 to Jun 2025 about Detroit, social assistance, health, MI, hours, production, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in California (SMU06000006500000002A) from 2007 to 2024 about health, hours, education, CA, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in Minnesota (SMU27000006500000002A) from 2007 to 2024 about MN, health, education, hours, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in Texas (SMU48000006500000002A) from 2007 to 2024 about health, hours, education, TX, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Hours Worked for Health Care and Social Assistance: Hospitals (NAICS 622) in the United States (IPURN622L200000000) from 1987 to 2024 about healthcare, hospitals, social assistance, health, NAICS, IP, hours, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in Hawaii (SMU15000006500000002A) from 2007 to 2024 about HI, health, hours, education, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services: Private Education and Health Services in Colorado (SMU08000006500000002) from Jan 2007 to Jun 2025 about health, CO, hours, education, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Hours Worked for Health Care and Social Assistance: Vocational Rehabilitation Services (NAICS 624310) in the United States (IPURN624310L200000000) from 1987 to 2024 about healthcare, social assistance, health, NAICS, IP, hours, services, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in Missouri (SMU29000006500000002A) from 2007 to 2024 about MO, health, education, hours, services, employment, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Average Weekly Hours of All Employees: Education and Health Services in New Jersey (DISCONTINUED) (SMU34000006500000002SA) from Jan 2007 to Mar 2022 about NJ, health, hours, education, services, employment, and USA.
analyze the health and retirement study (hrs) with r the hrs is the one and only longitudinal survey of american seniors. with a panel starting its third decade, the current pool of respondents includes older folks who have been interviewed every two years as far back as 1992. unlike cross-sectional or shorter panel surveys, respondents keep responding until, well, death d o us part. paid for by the national institute on aging and administered by the university of michigan's institute for social research, if you apply for an interviewer job with them, i hope you like werther's original. figuring out how to analyze this data set might trigger your fight-or-flight synapses if you just start clicking arou nd on michigan's website. instead, read pages numbered 10-17 (pdf pages 12-19) of this introduction pdf and don't touch the data until you understand figure a-3 on that last page. if you start enjoying yourself, here's the whole book. after that, it's time to register for access to the (free) data. keep your username and password handy, you'll need it for the top of the download automation r script. next, look at this data flowchart to get an idea of why the data download page is such a righteous jungle. but wait, good news: umich recently farmed out its data management to the rand corporation, who promptly constructed a giant consolidated file with one record per respondent across the whole panel. oh so beautiful. the rand hrs files make much of the older data and syntax examples obsolete, so when you come across stuff like instructions on how to merge years, you can happily ignore them - rand has done it for you. the health and retirement study only includes noninstitutionalized adults when new respondents get added to the panel (as they were in 1992, 1993, 1998, 2004, and 2010) but once they're in, they're in - respondents have a weight of zero for interview waves when they were nursing home residents; but they're still responding and will continue to contribute to your statistics so long as you're generalizing about a population from a previous wave (for example: it's possible to compute "among all americans who were 50+ years old in 1998, x% lived in nursing homes by 2010"). my source for that 411? page 13 of the design doc. wicked. this new github repository contains five scripts: 1992 - 2010 download HRS microdata.R loop through every year and every file, download, then unzip everything in one big party impor t longitudinal RAND contributed files.R create a SQLite database (.db) on the local disk load the rand, rand-cams, and both rand-family files into the database (.db) in chunks (to prevent overloading ram) longitudinal RAND - analysis examples.R connect to the sql database created by the 'import longitudinal RAND contributed files' program create tw o database-backed complex sample survey object, using a taylor-series linearization design perform a mountain of analysis examples with wave weights from two different points in the panel import example HRS file.R load a fixed-width file using only the sas importation script directly into ram with < a href="http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2012/07/importing-public-data-with-sas-instructions-into-r.html">SAScii parse through the IF block at the bottom of the sas importation script, blank out a number of variables save the file as an R data file (.rda) for fast loading later replicate 2002 regression.R connect to the sql database created by the 'import longitudinal RAND contributed files' program create a database-backed complex sample survey object, using a taylor-series linearization design exactly match the final regression shown in this document provided by analysts at RAND as an update of the regression on pdf page B76 of this document . click here to view these five scripts for more detail about the health and retirement study (hrs), visit: michigan's hrs homepage rand's hrs homepage the hrs wikipedia page a running list of publications using hrs notes: exemplary work making it this far. as a reward, here's the detailed codebook for the main rand hrs file. note that rand also creates 'flat files' for every survey wave, but really, most every analysis you c an think of is possible using just the four files imported with the rand importation script above. if you must work with the non-rand files, there's an example of how to import a single hrs (umich-created) file, but if you wish to import more than one, you'll have to write some for loops yourself. confidential to sas, spss, stata, and sudaan users: a tidal wave is coming. you can get water up your nose and be dragged out to sea, or you can grab a surf board. time to transition to r. :D