207 results match your criteria: "German Institute for Economic Research.[Affiliation]"
Psychol Aging
December 2024
Socio-Economic Panel, German Institute for Economic Research.
For many people, parenthood constitutes a crucial part of a successful life. Yet, the number of adults who never have children is increasing and has prompted concerns about their well-being. Past research mostly focused on parents and rarely investigated factors that are theoretically meaningful for the well-being of adults without children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2024
Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, The University of Melbourne, Faculty of Business and Economics Building, 111 Barry Street, 3010, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Sci Rep
October 2024
Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring, Robert Koch Institute, Nordufer 20, Berlin, 13353, Germany.
Aging is a complex process influenced by mechanisms operating at numerous levels of functioning. Multiple biomarkers of age have been identified, yet we know little about how the different alternative age indicators are intertwined. In the Berlin Aging Study II (nmin= 328; nmax= 1,517, women = 51%; 14.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Sociol
September 2024
Research Group Gender Economics, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany.
This study explores how gender and age interact in shaping beliefs about fair pay through a factorial survey experiment conducted with German employees. Respondents evaluated hypothetical worker descriptions varying in age, gender, and earnings. While no gender gap in fair earnings was found for the youngest hypothetical workers, a significant gap favoring men emerged with increasing age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPublic Health
November 2024
Department of Health Economics, Center for Public Health, Medical University of Vienna, Kinderspitalgasse 15/1, 1090 Vienna, Austria. Electronic address:
Objectives: This study analyses waiting times for elective surgeries and potential determinants, including supplementary private health insurance, visits in the operating physician's private practice and informal payments for faster treatment.
Study Design: Retrospective patient questionnaire survey.
Methods: The survey was conducted in eleven Austrian rehabilitation centres in 2019.
PLoS One
August 2024
Strathclyde Institute of Education, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Prior research has identified that school absences harm children's academic achievement. However, this literature is focused on brief periods or single school years and does not consistently account for the dynamic nature of absences across multiple school years. This study examined dynamic trajectories of children's authorised and unauthorised absences throughout their compulsory school career in England.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Environ Biophys
November 2024
Workgroup for Infrastructure Policy (WIP), Technical University of Berlin (TU Berlin), Straße des 17. Juni 135, 10623, Berlin, Germany.
The 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations, established in 2015, aim to achieve global sustainability by 2030 through the improvement of environmental, social, and economic parameters. However, unlike earlier concepts such as the Agenda 21 of 1992, the SDGs overlook radioactive waste management and related challenges of radiation itself. First, we investigate the historic consideration and unexplained disappearance of radioactive waste in earlier sustainability concepts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2024
Department of Communication, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, United States of America.
Individuals' sensitivity to climate hazards is a central component of their vulnerability to climate change. In this paper, we introduce and outline the utility of a new intraindividual variability construct, affective sensitivity to air pollution (ASAP)-defined as the extent to which an individual's affective states fluctuate in accordance with daily changes in air quality. As such, ASAP pushes beyond examination of differences in individuals' exposures to air pollution to examination of differences in individuals' sensitivities to air pollution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Soc Psychol
October 2024
Department of Psychological Aging Research, Institute of Psychology, Heidelberg University.
Current psychological theories on daily social interactions emphasize individual differences yet are underspecified regarding contextual factors. We aim to extend this research by examining how two context factors shape social interactions in daily life: how many relationships people maintain and how densely people live together. In Study 1, 307 German participants ( = 39.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Public Health
May 2024
Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
Background: Psychosocial stress is considered a risk factor for physical and mental ill-health. Evidence on socioeconomic inequalities with regard to the psychosocial consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany is still limited. We aimed to investigate how pandemic-induced psychosocial stress (PIPS) in different life domains differed between socioeconomic groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nutr Health Aging
April 2024
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Department of Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases (Including Division of Lipid Metabolism), Biology of Aging Working Group, Augustenburger Platz 1, 13353 Berlin, Germany; Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Regenerative Immunology and Aging, BIH Center for Regenerative Therapies, 13353 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address:
Objectives: Change in body weight during the COVID-19 pandemic as an unintended side effect of lockdown measures has been predominantly reported for younger and middle-aged adults. However, information on older adults for which weight loss is known to result in adverse outcomes, is scarce. In this study we describe the body weight change in older adults before, during, and after the COVID-19 lockdown measures and explore putative associated factors with a focus on the period that includes the first six months of the COVID-19 containment measures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Environ Biophys
March 2024
Workgroup for Infrastructure Policy (WIP), Technical University of Berlin (TU Berlin), Straße des 17. Juni 135, 10623, Berlin, Germany.
This report summarizes the findings of a workshop held at the safeND Research Symposium and hosted by the German Federal Office for the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management (BASE) in Berlin in September 2023. The workshop aimed to channel perspectives from various fields of expertise to discuss key sustainability concepts in terms of radioactive waste management. Therefore, the report highlights that current sustainability concepts, such as the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) as well as the concept of Planetary Boundaries, neglect challenges arising from the production and storage of human-made radioactive materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Aging
February 2024
German Institute for Economic Research, German Socio-Economic Panel Study.
Research across a number of different areas in psychology has long shown that optimism and pessimism are predictive of a number of important future life outcomes. Despite a vast literature on the correlates and consequences, we know very little about how optimism and pessimism change across adulthood and old age and the sociodemographic factors that are associated with individual differences in such trajectories. In the present study, we conducted (parallel) analyses of standard items from the Life Orientation Test (Scheier & Carver, 1985) in three comprehensive data sets: Two-wave data from both the Berlin Aging Study II (N = 1,423, aged 60-88; M = 70.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSSM Popul Health
March 2024
Department of Population Medicine and Health Services Research, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Universitätsstraße 25, 33501, Bielefeld, Bielefeld, Germany.
Existing studies on contextual health effects struggle to account for compositional bias, limiting causal interpretation. We use refugee dispersal in Germany as a natural experiment to study the effect of area-level socioeconomic deprivation on mental and physical health, while considering the potential mediating role of neighbourhood characteristics. Refugees subject to dispersal (n = 1466) are selected from a nation-wide longitudinal refugee study (IAB-SOEP-BAMF Panel; 2016-2018).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Monit
January 2024
AG 2 Population Medicine and Health Services Research, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Germany.
Background: The utilisation of outpatient dental services is an important indicator for monitoring healthcare provision in Germany. In the general population, the 12-month prevalence of dental service utilization is 82.2 %.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Assess
June 2024
Empirical Research in Education, Department of Education and Psychology, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Familial socioeconomic background can impact not only academic success, but also the personality of offspring. Yet, there is little evidence on whether it might influence how parents describe their children's personality. To fill this gap, we used latent multitrait-multimethod (CTCM-1) models to examine familial socioeconomic background as possible predictor of parental perceiver effects regarding their offspring's personality by contrasting parental assessments against teacher-reports.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Health Geogr
December 2023
School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Universitätsstraße 25, 33615, Bielefeld, Germany.
Background: Quantifying spatial access to care-the interplay of accessibility and availability-is vital for healthcare planning and understanding implications of services (mal-)distribution. A plethora of methods aims to measure potential spatial access to healthcare services. The current study conducts a systematic review to identify and assess gravity model-type methods for spatial healthcare access measurement and to summarize the use of these measures in empirical research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
December 2023
Fakultät Für Psychologie Und Sportwissenschaft, Abteilung Für Psychologie, Universität Bielefeld, 10 01 31, Bielefeld, Germany.
The current study tested whether the reported lower wellbeing of parents after preterm birth, relative to term birth, is a continuation of a pre-existing difference before pregnancy. Parents from Germany (the German Socio-Economic Panel Study, N = 10,649) and the United Kingdom (British Household Panel Study and Understanding Society, N = 11,012) reported their new-born's birthweight and gestational age, subsequently categorised as very preterm or very low birthweight (VP/VLBW, < 32 weeks or < 1500 g), moderately/late preterm or low birthweight (MLP/LBW, ≥ 32 weeks and < 37 weeks/≥ 1500 g and < 2500 g), or term-born (≥ 37 weeks and ≥ 2500 g). Mixed models were used to analyse life satisfaction, an aspect of wellbeing, at four assessments-two years and six months before birth and six months and two years afterwards.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEClinicalMedicine
October 2023
Department of Population Medicine and Health Services Research, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Universitätsstraße 25, 33501, Bielefeld, Germany.
Background: Migration health research pays little attention to the places into which people migrate. Studies on health effects of contextual factors are often limited because of the ability of individuals to self-select their environment, but natural experiments may allow for the causal effect of contexts to be examined. The objective was to synthesise the evidence on contextual health effects from natural experiments among migrant groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Addict Med
November 2023
From the Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA (HS); Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA (HS); School of Social Work, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA (CFB, SSH); Department of Economics, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA (CFB); and Department of Macroeconomics, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Berlin, Germany (CFB).
Objective: The aim of the study is to examine the associations between mandatory access prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs), pain management clinic (PMC) laws, and doctor shopping (DS) laws with adolescent nonmedical use of prescription medications (NUPM).
Methods: We linked 2011-2015 Youth Risk Behavior Survey data on 364,103 adolescents across 40 states with PDMP, PMC laws, and DS laws. We conducted a 2-way fixed effects logistic regression model to examine the associations between state drug laws and adolescent self-reported NUPM.
Emotion
April 2024
Department of Education and Psychology, Freie Universitat Berlin.
Social interactions are crucial to affective well-being. Still, people vary interindividually and intraindividually in their social needs. Social need regulation theories state that mismatches between momentary social desire and actual social contact result in lowered affect, yet empirical knowledge about this dynamic regulation is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUCL Open Environ
October 2023
The Luc Hoffmann Institute, Rue Mauverney 28 1196 Gland, Switzerland.
Climate change and biodiversity loss trigger policies targeting and impacting local communities worldwide. However, research and policy implementation often fail to sufficiently consider community responses and to involve them. We present the results of a collective self-assessment exercise for eight case studies of communications with regard to climate change or biodiversity loss between project teams and local communities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Public Health
February 2024
Department of Epidemiology and International Public Health, Bielefeld School of Public Health (BiSPH), Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany.
Background: Experiencing the onset of a chronic disease is a serious health event impacting living conditions and wellbeing. Investigating wellbeing development and its predictors is crucial to understand how individuals adapt to chronic illnesses. This study (i) analyzed the impact of a chronic disease on wellbeing development, and (ii) explored spatial healthcare access as potential moderating factor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Public Health
October 2023
Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
To evaluate the socioeconomic patterns of SARS-CoV-2 antigen contacts through infection, vaccination or both ("hybrid immunity") after 1 year of vaccination campaign. Data were derived from the German seroepidemiological Corona Monitoring Nationwide study (RKI-SOEP-2; = 10,448; November 2021-February 2022). Combining serological and self-report data, we estimated adjusted prevalence ratios (PR) of SARS-CoV-2 infection, COVID-19 vaccination, basic immunization (at least two SARS-CoV-2 antigen contacts through vaccination and/or infection), and three antigen contacts by education and income.
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