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Cameron Deal — PhD Student in Business Economics at Harvard University, studying health and labor economics.
Published in JAMA Pediatrics, 2021
This paper synthesizes existing LGBTQ health research and its implications for anti-transgender legislation and transgender youth. We focus specifically on access to gender-affirming care and sports participation for transgender youth.
Published in JAMA, 2022
We study disparities in health risk behaviors between gender minority adolescents and cisgender adolescents. We also examine gender questioning adolescents and the health disparities they experience.
Recommended citation: Gilbert Gonzales, Cameron Deal. (2022). "Health Risk Factors and Outcomes Among Gender Minority High School Students in 15 US States" JAMA.
Published in Economics Letters, 2022
Bostock v. Clayton County improved attitudes towards LGBT people. Respondents with the most unfavorable attitudes had larger improvements. The effects are driven by those interested in government, men, and Republicans.
Recommended citation: Deal, Cameron. (2022). "Bound By Bostock: The Effect of Policies on Attitudes." Economics Letters.
Published:
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Published:
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Teaching Assistant, Undergraduate Course, Vanderbilt University, 2021
Surveys in public policy analysis. Types, design, modes of implementation,sampling strategies, and data collection. Data management, cleaning, and analysis. Created Stata programming assignments, assisted with Stata instruction and grading of programming assignments.
Syllabus
Instructor, Undergraduate Tutorial, Harvard University, Department of Economics, 2026
An economics tutorial in Harvard’s Ec 970 program that uses economic models and econometric tools to study the causes and consequences of health inequality—from the roughly 14-year life-expectancy gap between the richest and poorest men to disparities in infant mortality and youth homelessness. Drawing on public health, demography, and sociology alongside economics, the course is designed as an introduction to academic economics, helping students transition from consumers of textbook economics to producers of original research at the intersection of economics and health.
Syllabus