37 results match your criteria: "Sheffield Methods Institute[Affiliation]"
Soc Sci Med
December 2024
Department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering, University of Sheffield, UK.
Int J Public Health
December 2024
Population Health Sciences Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
Objectives: Fuel poverty, defined in this study as a household's inability to meet basic energy needs, presents a significant challenge. We aimed to map research on the impact of fuel poverty on mental health.
Methods: We searched peer review and grey literature repositories.
Soc Sci Med
December 2024
Department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering, University of Sheffield, UK. Electronic address:
Alcohol is one of the leading causes of preventable deaths in the United States (US). Prior research has demonstrated that alcohol consumption and related mortality are socially patterned; however, no study has investigated intersectional disparities in alcohol consumption, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Hum Biol
February 2024
Sheffield Methods Institute, School of Education, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Public Health Nutr
September 2024
Department of Geography, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Objectives: To identify (1) who experiences food insecurity of differing severity and (2) who uses food banks in England, Wales and Northern Ireland; (3) whether the same groups experience food insecurity and use food banks; and (4) to explore country- and region-level differences in food insecurity and food bank use.
Design: This pooled cross-sectional study analysed the characteristics of adults experiencing food insecurity of differing severity using generalised ordinal logistic regression models and the characteristics of adults using food banks using logistic regression models, using data from three waves of the Food and You 2 surveys, 2021-2023.
Setting: England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Nutr Bull
December 2024
Sheffield Methods Institute, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
In 2023, 25% of adults in England, Wales and Northern Ireland experienced food insecurity. The concentration of food insecurity in both socioeconomically disadvantaged groups and households containing children raises concerns about its uneven nutritional and health impacts across different groups. In parallel with rising food insecurity over the past decade, concerns about the environmental consequences of human diets are intensifying, where urgent changes are needed to people's diets to avoid irreversible environmental damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppetite
December 2024
Sheffield Methods Institute, The University of Sheffield, 2 Whitham Rd, Sheffield, S10 2AH, UK.
PLoS One
August 2024
Department of Economics, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom.
Several studies have explored the relationship between socially constructed neighbourhood boundaries (henceforth social boundaries) and ethnic tensions. To measure these relationships, studies have used area-level demographic data to predict the location of social boundaries and their characteristics. The most common approach uses areal wombling to locate neighbouring areas with large differences in residential characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Sci Med
June 2024
Centre for Multilevel Modelling, School of Education, University of Bristol, UK.
The intersectional Multilevel Analysis of Individual Heterogeneity and Discriminatory Accuracy (MAIHDA) approach is gaining prominence in health sciences and beyond, as a robust quantitative method for identifying intersectional inequalities in a range of individual outcomes. However, it has so far not been applied to longitudinal data, despite the availability of such data, and growing recognition that intersectional social processes and determinants are not static, unchanging phenomena. Drawing on intersectionality and life course theories, we develop a longitudinal version of the intersectional MAIHDA approach, allowing the analysis not just of intersectional inequalities in static individual differences, but also of life course trajectories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Public Health
August 2024
Population Health Science Institute, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Soc Sci Med
June 2024
Centre for Multilevel Modelling and School of Education, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Intersectional Multilevel Analysis of Individual Heterogeneity and Discriminatory Accuracy (MAIHDA) has been welcomed as a new gold standard for quantitative evaluation of intersectional inequalities, and it is being rapidly adopted across the health and social sciences. In their commentary "What does the MAIHDA method explain?", Wilkes and Karimi (2024) raise methodological concerns with this approach, leading them to advocate for the continued use of conventional single-level linear regression models with fixed-effects interaction parameters for quantitative intersectional analysis. In this response, we systematically address these concerns, and ultimately find them to be unfounded, arising from a series of subtle but important misunderstandings of the MAIHDA approach and literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSSM Popul Health
June 2024
Research Unit of Social Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Lund, Sweden.
Intersectional multilevel analysis of individual heterogeneity and discriminatory accuracy (I-MAIHDA) is an innovative approach for investigating inequalities, including intersectional inequalities in health, disease, psychosocial, socioeconomic, and other outcomes. I-MAIHDA and related MAIHDA approaches have conceptual and methodological advantages over conventional single-level regression analysis. By enabling the study of inequalities produced by numerous interlocking systems of marginalization and oppression, and by addressing many of the limitations of studying interactions in conventional analyses, intersectional MAIHDA provides a valuable analytical tool in social epidemiology, health psychology, precision medicine and public health, environmental justice, and beyond.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
March 2024
Centre for Applied Childhood, Youth and Family Research, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield HD1 2DH, UK. Electronic address:
Background: Inequalities in the proportion of children experiencing abuse and neglect or a children's social care intervention have become a research focus in the last decade. One almost unexplored factor of growth in rates of children in out-of-home care is local party politics.
Objective: We assessed whether growth in rates of out-of-home care in England varied by local authority party political control.
BMC Public Health
December 2023
Sheffield Methods Institute, The Wave, 2 Witham Road, S10 2AH, Sheffield, UK.
Background: Access to hygiene facilities is essential for health and well-being, and in many countries, employers are legally obliged to ensure that hygiene facilities are readily available. This interview study considers how being on the move impacts the ability of mobile workers (such as community care workers, police, delivery drivers, gardeners, cleaners, utility workers) to access hygiene facilities, and the challenges they face.
Methods: Using a qualitative exploratory research design, we investigate through semi-structured interviews with 22 United Kingdom (UK) mobile workers (1) what influences their access to hygiene facilities, (2) their hygiene needs, and (3) where mobile workers are accessing hygiene facilities.
Sci Total Environ
October 2023
Energy Institute, Advanced Resource Efficiency Centre and Energy 2050, University of Sheffield, UK; Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Sheffield, UK.
This paper aims to understand the critical areas for sustainable behavioural change on a university campus in order to achieve the net zero‑carbon ambition pre- and post-COVID-19 pandemic recovery. For this purpose, the current empirical study is the first attempt to statistically examine the whole campus as a system, considering staff and student views (campus users), by developing an index measuring propensity for sustainable behavioural change to achieve a net zero‑carbon campus. The novelty of this study is based on the following: (i) The impact of environmental sustainability measures due to COVID-19 is examined on three themes: physical activity routines on a daily basis, research, and teaching and learning, and (ii) the index that is compatible with quantifying the behavioural change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Consult Clin Psychol
February 2023
School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield.
Objective: Treatment outcomes are known to vary according to therapist and clinic/organization (therapist effect, clinic effect). Outcomes may also vary according to the neighborhood where a person lives (neighborhood effect), but this has not previously been formally quantified. Evidence suggests that deprivation may contribute to explaining such cluster effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Sci
April 2023
Department of Psychology, Linnaeus University.
In April 2019, published its first issue in which all Research Articles received the Open Data badge. We used that issue to investigate the effectiveness of this badge, focusing on the adherence to its aim at : sharing both data and code to ensure reproducibility of results. Twelve researchers of varying experience levels attempted to reproduce the results of the empirical articles in the target issue (at least three researchers per article).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Nutr
July 2023
School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield, 30 Regent St, SheffieldS1 4DA, UK.
Body weight regulation may be influenced by the timing of food intake. The relationship between children's BMI and their daily pattern of energy consumption was investigated using data from the UK National Diet and Nutrition Survey 2008-2019. The sample included 6281 children aged 4-18 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Place
September 2022
Department of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield. Elmfield Building, Northumberland Road, Sheffield, S10 2TU, UK. Electronic address:
While social and spatial determinants of biomarkers have been reported, no previous study has examined both together within an intersectional perspective. We present a novel extension of quantitative intersectional analyses using cross-classified multilevel models to explore how intersectional positions and neighbourhood deprivation are associated with biomarkers, using baseline UK Biobank data (collected from 2006 to 2010). Our results suggest intersectional inequalities in biomarkers of healthy ageing are mostly established by age 40-49, but different intersections show different relationships with deprivation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Prim Care
April 2022
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, M13 9PL, Manchester, UK.
Background: A national policy focus in England to address general practice workforce issues has led to a commitment to employ significant numbers of non-general practitioner (GP) roles to redistribute workload. This paper focuses on two such roles: the care navigation (CN) and social prescribing link worker (SPLW) roles, which both aim to introduce 'active signposting' into primary care, to direct patients to the right professional/services at the right time and free up GP time. There is a lack of research exploring staff views of how these roles are being planned and operationalised into general practice and how signposting is being integrated into primary care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
March 2022
Policy Institute, King's College London, London, UK.
Objective: To test whether demographic variation in vaccine hesitancy can be explained by trust and healthcare experiences.
Design: Cross-sectional study.
Setting: Data collected online in April 2021.
Front Public Health
April 2022
Institute of Sociological Research, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
This study revisits the effects of mammography screening programs on inequalities in breast screening uptake in Switzerland. The progressive introduction of regional mammography programs by 12 out of the 26 Swiss cantons (regions) since 1999 offers an opportunity to perform an ecological quasi-experimental study. We examine absolute income and marital status inequalities in mammography uptake, and whether the cantons' implementation of mammography programs moderate these inequalities, as previous research has devoted little attention to this.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol
June 2022
Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, Cathedral Court, 1 Vicar Lane, Sheffield, S1 2LT, England.
Purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected the way many individuals go about their daily lives. This study attempted to model the complexity of change in lifestyle quality as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and its context within the UK adult population.
Methods: Data from the COVID-19 Psychological Research Consortium Study (Wave 3, July 2020; N = 1166) were utilised.
PLoS One
November 2021
School of Psychology, Ulster University, Ulster, Northern Ireland.
COVID-19 continues to pose a threat to global public health. Multiple safe and effective vaccines against COVID-19 are available with one-third of the global population now vaccinated. Achieving a sufficient level of vaccine coverage to suppress COVID-19 requires, in part, sufficient acceptance among the public.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Res Policy Syst
June 2021
Race Equality Foundation, 27 Greenwood Pl, Kentish Town, London, NW5 1LB, United Kingdom.
Background: The concept of "intersectionality" is increasingly employed within public health arenas, particularly in North America, and is often heralded as offering great potential to advance health inequalities research and action. Given persistently poor progress towards tackling health inequalities, and recent calls to reframe this agenda in the United Kingdom and Europe, the possible contribution of intersectionality deserves attention. Yet, no existing research has examined professional stakeholder understandings and perspectives on applying intersectionality to this field.
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