|
Vkpl The best stores for Black Friday deals
A study by LendingTree recently revealed that women in Florida pay close to $200 more than men in car insurance, the largest gap in the country.According to the study released in February, Florida women pay an average of $2,687, while men in the same state pay $2,488, a difference of $199 annually.Nationally, women pay $32 more in car insurance than men, according to LendingTree.LendingTree analyzed data from 35-year-old men and women with mostly clean records and minimum and full-coverage car insurance policies.Rob Bhatt, a LendingTree analyst, said using gender as a component for car insurance rates is actually bann stanley cup ed in eight states. There are states that ban this practice because this has been controversial and considered unjust, Bhatt said. If you look at California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, those are voting states that ban gender rating or ban which prohibit insurance companies from using gender. North Carolina and Pennsylvania also be on the practice. So some states have just said this isn t fair and let s not do it. Florida, though, i stanley cup usa s not one of the eight states that ban this practice.An independent insurance agent said gender is just one factor many car insurance companies use when determining your quote. Is this something that stanley cup I can ask my agent, like can you ask me to see if my insurance company is charging me more just because I m a woman said Jay Wolfberg, president of We Insure. Yeah, I don t know if you can narrow down that level. But if you re paying too m Capo Parents stressed over job requirements, child care facility closures due to coronavirus concerns
A recent decline in heart failure-related deaths in the United States has reversed, and those types of deaths are now climbing nationwide, especially among adults ages 35 to 64.The trend, which also revealed some racial disparities, was found in a research paper published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology on Monday.The paper points to an increase in the prevalence of obesity and diabetes as possibly driving a parallel rise in heart failure deaths.The research demonstrates that greater loss of life from heart failure is occurring, especially premature death in those under the age of 65, said Dr. Sadiya Khan, an assistant professo stanley hrnek r of cardiology at Northwestern University s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, who was first author of the paper.The paper doesn t distinguish why this rise in heart failure deaths occurred -- for instance, are more younger adults developing heart failure, or is heart failure more deadly now Our suspicion is that it is likely the former, because of the obesity, hype stanley cup rtension and diabetes epidemics, Khan said.About 5.7 million adults in the United State stanley kaffeebecher s have heart failure, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . Heart failure is more common in people who are obese or overweight, as excess weight can put strain on the heart, and those who have a hi |
|