id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_sq5fbzalf5hubnmpgvdctxwjdi Ari Seifter Analysis of the bereavement effect after the death of a spouse in the Amish: a population-based retrospective cohort study 2014.0 8 .pdf application/pdf 7081 1234 76 that the high level of social support in the Amish population might mitigate the bereavement effect. We considered remarriage and the number of surviving children as additional potential modifiers of the We show below examples of how we represented the survival data for CPH analysis using a time modelling standard approach is to convert the couple's demographic information, date of death, date of birth, remarriage and the number of surviving children in columns 1907 at age 47; got remarried; the number of surviving children=3 and eventually died on 1 January 1923 the spouse.2 5 20 21 In nearly all age at widowhood categories, the bereavement effect is stronger in widowed number of surviving children and mortality in husbands study,8 in each case, the higher number of surviving children was not significantly associated with lower mortality change for any of the HRs related to the number of surviving children was 0.03 (data not shown). ./cache/work_sq5fbzalf5hubnmpgvdctxwjdi.pdf ./txt/work_sq5fbzalf5hubnmpgvdctxwjdi.txt