1 / 74

James H. Johnson, Jr.

DISRUPTIVE DEMOGRAPHICS The Changing Face of the Patient of the Future . James H. Johnson, Jr. William Rand Kenan , Jr. Distinguished Professor of Entrepreneurship & Strategy

monte
Download Presentation

James H. Johnson, Jr.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DISRUPTIVE DEMOGRAPHICS • The Changing Face of the • Patient of the Future James H. Johnson, Jr. William Rand Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Entrepreneurship & Strategy Kenan-Flagler Business School Director, Urban Investment Strategies CenterFrank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private EnterpriseUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  2. Overview • Disruptive Demographics • Opportunities & Challenges • Implications for Healthcare Planning & Delivery

  3. Disruptive Demographics • The “Browning” of America • The “Greying” of America • The Nexus of Diversity Issues

  4. Personal and Lifestyle Characteristics by Generation

  5. WORKPLACE CHARACTERISTICS

  6. WORKPLACE CHARACTERISTICS (CONT’D)

  7. People On The Move

  8. The Numbers Legal Immigrants: • 1920-1961: 206,000 annually • 1961-1992: 561,000 annually • 1993-1998: 800,654 annually • 1999-2004: 879,400 annually • 2005-2008: 1,137,000 annually Refugees, Parolees, Asylees • 1961-1993: 2.1 million (65,000 annually) • 1994-1998: 428,361 (85,672 annually) • 1999-2004: 487,386 (81,231 annually) • 2005-2008: 203,642 (75,661 annually) Illegal Immigrants: • 300,000 to 400,000 annually over the past two decades • Three million granted amnesty in 1986 • 2.7 million illegal immigrants remained in U.S. after 1986 reforms • October 1996: INS estimated that there were 5 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. • August 2005: Illegal population range from 7 to 15 million.

  9. Non-Immigrants Admitted to • the United States • 1981 - 2008

  10. World Region of Birth for U.S. Population, 1970-2008

  11. Population Estimates by Race/Ethnicity 1988 - 2050

  12. Total Fertility Rates of U.S. Women by Race/Ethnicity 1988 - 2050

  13. America’s Color Adjustment

  14. Relative Distribution of U.S. Population by Race/Ethnicity, 2005 & 2050

  15. Women who had a birth in the last 12 months, Ages 15 – 50, by Select Characteristics 2006

  16. Women who had a birth in the last 12 months, Ages 15 – 50, by Select Characteristics 2006 (Cont’d)

  17. Women who had a birth in the last 12 months, Ages 15 – 50, by Select Characteristics 2006 (Cont’d)

  18. Women who had a birth in the last 12 months, Ages 15 – 50, by Select Characteristics 2006 (Cont’d)

  19. Percent Distribution of U.S. Births by Race/Ethnicity 1990 & 2008

  20. Median Age of U.S. Population by Race, Hispanic Origin & Gender, 2009

  21. Completed Fertility for Women 40 - 44 Years Old

  22. U.S. Total and Foreign Born Population Change, 1990-2000

  23. Change in Regional Distribution of Foreign Born Population, 1970 - 2008

  24. Percent Change in Total and Foreign Born Population, by Region, 1990-2000

  25. Net Population Change Attributable to Non-White Population Growth, 1990 - 2000

  26. Net Population Change Attributable to Non-White Population Growth, 2000 - 2004

  27. In-Migration, Out-Migration, Net Migration, and Movers from Abroad for Regions, 1990-2000

  28. Net Migration Trends, 2000-2008 TOTAL Black Hispanic Elderly Foreign Born = Net Import = Net Export

  29. U.S. Population Change by Region, 2000 - 2009

  30. Population by Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States: 2000

  31. Net Population Change in the United States by Race and Hispanic or Latino Origin, 1990 - 2000

  32. U.S. Population Change by Race & Ethnicity, 2000 - 2009

  33. U.S. Population Turning 50, 55, 62, and 65 Years of Age, 2007 - 2015

  34. Absolute and Relative Change in the Gender/Age Composition of the U.S. Population, 1990 - 2000

  35. U.S. Population Change By Age, 2000 - 2009

More Related