7 results match your criteria: "Center for Children and Childhood Studies[Affiliation]"
Front Public Health
November 2017
Department of Economics, Rutgers University, The State University of New Jersey, Camden, NJ, United States.
Objectives: The purposes of this study are: (1) to empirically identify decision-making preferences of long-term health-care use, especially informal and formal home care (FHC) service use; (2) to evaluate outcomes vs. costs based on substitutability of informal and FHC service use; and (3) to investigate health outcome disparity based on substitutability.
Methodology And Data: The methods of ordinary least squares, a logit model, and a bivariate probit model are used by controlling for socioeconomic, demographic, and physical/mental health factors to investigate outcomes and costs based substitutability of informal and formal health-care use.
Balkan Med J
January 2016
Department of Economics, Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey, Center for Children and Childhood Studies, New Jersey, USA.
Background: Serbia, as the largest market of the Western Balkans, has entered socioeconomic transition with substantial delay compared to most of Eastern Europe. Its health system reform efforts were bold during the past 15 years, but their results were inconsistent in various areas. The two waves of global recession that hit Balkan economies ultimately reflected to the financial situation of healthcare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
August 2015
Division of Federal-State Cooperative Programs, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor , Philadelphia, PA , USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health
February 2015
Department of Public Policy and Administration, Rutgers University, The State University of New Jersey, 311 North 5th Street, Camden, NJ 08102, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol
June 2008
Center for Children and Childhood Studies, Rutgers University, Camden, NJ 08102, USA.
The child sample of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (n.d.) was analyzed to examine the relation of undesirable personality change in early childhood to neighborhood economic deprivation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Sci
June 2007
Center for Children and Childhood Studies, Rutgers University, NJ 08102, USA.
We hypothesized that personality change in children can be predicted by the interaction of family risk with susceptibility to autonomic arousal and that children characterized by both high-risk families and highly reactive autonomic nervous systems tend to show maladaptive change. This hypothesis was tested in a 6-year longitudinal study in which personality-type prototypicality, problem behavior, and negative emotional intensity were measured at 2-year intervals. The results indicated that children who both had exaggerated skin conductance responses (a measure of autonomic reactivity) and were living in families with multiple risk factors were most likely to develop an undercontrolled personality type and to exhibit increases in problem behavior and negative emotional intensity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Sci
August 2005
Center for Children and Childhood Studies, Rutgers University, Camden, NJ 08102, USA.