Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brandon Vick is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brandon Vick.


Social Science Research | 2017

Gender, race & the veteran wage gap

Brandon Vick; Gabrielle Fontanella

This paper analyzes earnings outcomes of Iraq/Afghanistan-era veterans. We utilize the 2009-2013 American Community Survey and a worker-matching methodology to decompose wage differences between veteran and non-veteran workers. Among fully-employed, 25-40 year-olds, veteran workers make 3% less than non-veteran workers. While male veterans make 9% less than non-veterans, female and black veterans experience a wage premium (2% and 7% respectively). Decomposition of the earnings gap identifies some of its sources. Relatively higher rates of disability and lower rates of educational attainment serve to increase the overall wage penalty against veterans. However, veterans work less in low-paying occupations than non-veterans, serving to reduce the wage penalty. Finally, among male and white subgroups, non-veterans earn more in the top quintile due largely to having higher educational attainment and greater representation in higher-paying occupations, such as management.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2016

Career satisfaction of Pennsylvanian dentists and dental hygienists and their plans to leave direct patient care

Brandon Vick

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to explore a number of practice-related dynamics between dentists and dental hygienists, including their career dissatisfaction, plans to leave direct patient care, hiring difficulties, and full-time work. METHODS Data come from the 2013 Pennsylvania Health Workforce Surveys, a sample of 5,771 dentists and 6,023 dental hygienists, and logistic regression is used to estimate the relationships between outcome areas - dissatisfaction, plans to leave patient care, and hiring/job outcomes - and a number of explanatory variables, including demographic and practice characteristics. RESULTS Dentists working in practices that employ hygienists have lower odds of reporting overall dissatisfaction and of leaving patient care in the next 6 years than those that do not employ hygienists. Dental hygienists that work full-time hours across two or more jobs have higher odds of dissatisfaction than those who work full-time in one job only. Part-time work in a single hygienist job is associated with higher odds of leaving the career, relative to having a single, full-time job. CONCLUSIONS Results suggest that employment of dental hygienists is associated with lower career dissatisfaction and extended careers for dentists. However, a number of dentist characteristics are associated with difficulty hiring hygienists, including rural practice, nonwhite race, and solo ownership. Only 37.5 percent of hygienists work in a single, full-time job, an outcome related to lower dissatisfaction and extended careers for hygienists. Characteristics associated with this job outcome include having an associate degree, having a local anesthesia permit, and not working for a solo practice.


Journal of Rural Health | 2016

Analyzing Rural Versus Urban Differences in Career Dissatisfaction and Plans to Leave Among Pennsylvanian Physicians.

Brandon Vick

PURPOSE This study estimates whether physicians in rural Pennsylvania have higher odds of career dissatisfaction and plans to leave patient care in the next 6 years, compared to their urban counterparts. Rural-urban differences were estimated across specific subgroups of physicians (gender, race, and specialty) and with regard to specific sources of career dissatisfaction. METHODS The 2012 Pennsylvania Health Workforce Survey of Physicians allowed for analysis of 17,444 physicians younger than 55 years old actively practicing patient care. Multivariate, logistic regression was performed to estimate the associations with 2 outcome areas: career dissatisfaction and plans to leave patient care in the next 6 years. Controls included rural setting, age, sex, race, work hours, specialty, and practice characteristics. RESULTS Over 12% of under-55 physicians are dissatisfied with their careers and over 18% report plans to leave patient care in the next 6 years. Rural physicians in Pennsylvania have 18.6% higher odds of reporting career dissatisfaction and 29.5% higher odds of leaving patient care in the next 6 years (P < .01 for each) versus their urban counterparts. CONCLUSIONS Rates of dissatisfaction and potential attrition among younger physicians are not insignificant, with a stronger association with rural practice. Given the large number of rural health shortage areas, better understanding this association is important to health care providers and policy makers. Regression results suggest that higher rural odds are related more to physician work (i.e., stress, practice demands, and lack of autonomy) and family situations and less related to income concerns.


Social Protection and Labor Policy and Technical Notes | 2011

Disability and Poverty in Developing Countries: A Snapshot from the World Health Survey

Sophie Mitra; Aleksandra Posarac; Brandon Vick


Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics | 2012

Poverty and severe psychiatric disorder in the U.S.: Evidence from the medical expenditure panel survey

Brandon Vick; Kristine Jones; Sophie Mitra


Archive | 2012

Disablement and Health

Eric Emerson; Brandon Vick; Hilary Graham; Chris Hatton; Gwynnyth Llewellyn; Ros Madden; Boika Rechel; Janet Robertson


Archive | 2011

Disability and Poverty in Developing Countries

Sophie Mitra; Aleksandra Posarac; Brandon Vick


Perspectives on Global Development and Technology | 2010

From Revolution to Evolution: Charting the Main Features of Microfinance 2.0

Ronald U. Mendoza; Brandon Vick


Archive | 2010

Poverty and Psychiatric Diagnosis in the U.S.: Evidence from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey

Brandon Vick; Kristine Jones; Sophie Mitra


Archive | 2017

Measuring the Gender Wage Gap in Appalachia

Brandon Vick

Collaboration


Dive into the Brandon Vick's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kristine Jones

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gabrielle Fontanella

Indiana University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Margaret A. Turk

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Suzanne McDermott

University of South Carolina

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michele Foster

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge