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  2. File:Sharing the Load - Amish Healthcare Financing.pdf

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sharing_the_Load...

    Consonant with this philosophy, many Amish do not participate in or receive benefits from Social Security or Medicare. They are also exempted from the Affordable Care Act of 2010. This study expands the limited documentation of Amish Hospital Aid, an Amish health insurance program that covers major medical costs.

  3. Health among the Amish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_among_the_Amish

    In a study from 2016, important differences in the children's innate immune cells and in the allergy inducing nature of the dust in their homes were found, leading to the conclusion that the Amish environment had protected against asthma by shaping the innate immune response. [14] Most Amish clearly seem to use some form of birth control, a ...

  4. Donald Kraybill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Kraybill

    Kraybill was born in Mount Joy, Pennsylvania, in 1945 to a Mennonite family and grew up on dairy farms in Mount Joy, Lampeter and Morgantown. [1] [2] [3] His surname Kraybill is a form of the name Graybill which is a typical Mennonite and Amish name, first recorded in America in 1728. [4]

  5. Plain people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_people

    Amish young women at the beach, Chincoteague, Virginia. The Old Order Amish are among the fastest-growing populations in the world. They have low infant mortality rates. The average Amish woman can expect to have at least seven live births. [23] Other plain sects with the same or similar doctrines can be expected to have similarly explosive growth.

  6. Ordnung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordnung

    The Amish have few written explanations why certain things are regulated by the Ordnung. Non-Amish are not allowed to attend their council meetings, and most Amish are hesitant to discuss the details with outsiders, therefore the precise reasons are difficult to explain. They formulate their rules with two interconnected goals in mind.

  7. Wisconsin v. Yoder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisconsin_v._Yoder

    Wisconsin v. Jonas Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that Amish children could not be placed under compulsory education past 8th grade.

  8. Swartzentruber Amish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swartzentruber_Amish

    Charles Hurst and David McConnell: An Amish Paradox: Diversity and Change in the World's Largest Amish Community, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore MD 2010 ISBN 9780801893988; Joe Mackall: Plain Secrets: An Outsider among the Amish, Boston, Mass. 2007. ISBN 9780807010648 (Account of a neighbor and friend to a Swartzentruber family)

  9. Raavan: Enemy of Aryavarta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raavan:_Enemy_of_Aryavarta

    Raavan is arguably the most complex villain in Indian literature, and Amish delivers one of the kind we have never met, re-imagining evil in ways we have not known.” [5] Gautam also noted Amish's penchant for weaving in deep philosophies — "From the physical to the philosophical, the discourse between the two, both silent as well as verbal ...