30 results match your criteria: "The Population Research Institute[Affiliation]"

This article explores the sexual subjectivity of women of post-reproductive age who seek partners on dating apps. The existing literature highlights the sexual subjectivity and agency of older women as contested and not sufficiently investigated. Even less research has been conducted on changes in the sexual subjectivity of women born in the USSR in the 1960s, with the liberalisation of sexual behaviour.

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Pregnancy scares, pregnancy uncertainty, and abortion attitude change.

Soc Sci Res

November 2022

Department of Sociology and Criminology and the Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802, United States.

Women's attitudes towards abortion are often assessed infrequently in their lives. This measurement may not capture how lifetime events, such as reproductive experiences, potentially influence attitudes towards abortion. Although reproductive attitudes can fluctuate with life's circumstances, there is little research on how abortion attitudes may change when a woman suspects she might be pregnant.

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Socially Connected Neighborhoods and the Spread of Sexually Transmitted Infections.

Demography

August 2022

Department of Sociology and Criminology, and the Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the United States have been increasing at record levels and exhibit unequal spatial patterning across urban populations and neighborhoods. Research on the effects of residential and nearby neighborhoods on STI proliferation has largely ignored the role of socially connected contexts, even though neighborhoods are routinely linked by individuals' movements across space for work and other social activities. We showcase how commuting and public transit networks contribute to the social spillover of STIs in Chicago.

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Rural Population Health and Aging: Toward a Multilevel and Multidimensional Research Agenda for the 2020s.

Am J Public Health

September 2020

Leif Jensen is with the Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park. Shannon M. Monnat is with the Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY. John J. Green is with the Center for Population Studies, University of Mississippi, University. Lori M. Hunter is with the University of Colorado Population Center, University of Colorado, Boulder. Martin J. Sliwinski is with the Center for Healthy Aging, Pennsylvania State University.

The unique health and aging challenges of rural populations often go unnoticed. In fact, the rural United States is home to disproportionate shares of older and sicker people, there are large and growing rural-urban and within-rural mortality disparities, many rural communities are in population decline, and rural racial/ethnic diversity is increasing.Yet rural communities are not monolithic, and although some rural places are characterized by declining health, others have seen large improvements in population health.

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This study investigates how unemployment is associated with the transition to parenthood among men and women in times of increased instability in the labour market. We provide novel insights into how education and life stage might modify the link between unemployment and fertility. We focus on a Nordic welfare state, Finland, and apply event history models to a rich register sample covering the years 1988-2009 (N = 306,413).

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In Puerto Rico, Counting Deaths And Making Deaths Count.

Health Aff (Millwood)

April 2018

Alexis R. Santos-Lozada ( ) is director of graduate studies in applied demography, Department of Sociology and Criminology, and a research affiliate in the Population Research Institute (PRI), both at Pennsylvania State University, in University Park. The author thanks Steven A. Haas (Pennsylvania State University), Gordon DeJong (Pennsylvania State University), Jeffrey T. Howard (Department of Defense), and Luis E. Melendez-Cintrón (University of Puerto Rico) for their recommendations. The author also acknowledges assistance provided by the PRI, which is supported by an infrastructure grant by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Health and Human Development (Grant No. P2CHD041025).

Island officials have struggled to capture Hurricane Maria's full impact in mortality statistics.

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With each successive generation in the United States, Mexican-origin families lose their initial dietary advantages. Focusing on children's diets, we ask whether greater socioeconomic status (SES) can help buffer Mexican-origin children in immigrant families from negative dietary acculturation or whether it exacerbates these dietary risks. Pooling data from the 1999 to 2009 waves of the continuous National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, we test whether the association between generational status and Mexican-origin children's nutrition varies by the family's SES.

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Examining Rural/Urban Differences in Prescription Opioid Misuse Among US Adolescents.

J Rural Health

March 2017

Department of Mental Health Law & Policy, Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida.

Purpose: This study examines differences in prescription opioid misuse (POM) among adolescents in rural, small urban, and large urban areas of the United States and identifies several individual, social, and community risk factors contributing to those differences.

Methods: We used nationally representative data from the 2011 and 2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health and estimated binary logistic regression and formal mediation models to assess past-year POM among 32,036 adolescents aged 12-17.

Results: Among adolescents, 6.

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Exploring the inequality-mortality relationship in the US with Bayesian spatial modeling.

Popul Res Policy Rev

June 2015

Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology and Education, The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 110-A Armsby, University Park, PA 16802, USA, Tel: +1-814-863-8642.

While there is evidence to suggest that socioeconomic inequality within places is associated with mortality rates among people living within them, the empirical connection between the two remains unsettled as potential confounders associated with racial and social structure are overlooked. This study seeks to test this relationship, to determine whether it is due to differential levels of deprivation and social capital, and does so with intrinsically conditional autoregressive Bayesian spatial modeling that effectively addresses the bias introduced by spatial dependence. We find that deprivation and social capital partly but not completely account for why inequality is positively associated with mortality and that spatial modeling generates more accurate predictions than does the traditional approach.

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Reducing Medicaid Churning: Extending Eligibility For Twelve Months Or To End Of Calendar Year Is Most Effective.

Health Aff (Millwood)

July 2015

Namrata Uberoi is an analyst in health care financing at the Congressional Research Service, in Washington, D.C.

Medicaid churning--the constant exit and reentry of beneficiaries as their eligibility changes--has long been a problem for both Medicaid administrators and recipients. Churning will continue under the Affordable Care Act because, despite new federal rules, Medicaid eligibility will continue to be based on current monthly income. We developed a longitudinal simulation model to evaluate four policy options for modifying or extending Medicaid eligibility to reduce churning.

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Safer Roads Owing to Higher Gasoline Prices: How Long It Takes.

Am J Public Health

August 2015

Guangqing Chi is with the Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology, and Education, the Population Research Institute, and the Social Science Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park. Willie Brown is with the Information Technology Laboratory, United States Army Engineer Research and Development Center, Vicksburg, MS. Xiang Zhang and Yanbing Zheng are with the Department of Statistics, University of Kentucky, Lexington.

Objectives: We investigated how much time passes before gasoline price changes affect traffic crashes.

Methods: We systematically examined 2004 to 2012 Mississippi traffic crash data by age, gender, and race. Control variables were unemployment rate, seat belt use, alcohol consumption, climate, and temporal and seasonal variations.

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Distress in the Desert: Neighborhood Disorder, Resident Satisfaction, and Quality of Life during the Las Vegas Foreclosure Crisis.

Urban Aff Rev Thousand Oaks Calif

March 2015

Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology, and Education, The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 110B Armsby Building, University Park, PA 16802.

Using surveys collected from a sample of households nested within 'naturally occurring' neighborhoods in Las Vegas, NV during the 2007-2009 economic recession, this study examines the associations between real and perceived measures of neighborhood distress (foreclosure rate, physical decay, crime) and residents' reports of neighborhood quality of life and neighborhood satisfaction. Consistent with social disorganization theory, both real and perceived measures of neighborhood disorder were negatively associated with quality of life and neighborhood satisfaction. Residents' perceptions of neighborliness partially acted as a buffer against the effects of neighborhood distress, including housing foreclosures, on quality of life and neighborhood satisfaction.

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Can we spin straw into gold? An evaluation of immigrant legal status imputation approaches.

Demography

February 2015

The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 601B Oswald Tower, University Park, PA, 16802, USA,

Researchers have developed logical, demographic, and statistical strategies for imputing immigrants' legal status, but these methods have never been empirically assessed. We used Monte Carlo simulations to test whether, and under what conditions, legal status imputation approaches yield unbiased estimates of the association of unauthorized status with health insurance coverage. We tested five methods under a range of missing data scenarios.

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Exposure science has developed rapidly and there is an increasing call for greater precision in the measurement of individual exposures across space and time. Social science interest in an individual's environmental exposure, broadly conceived, has arguably been quite limited conceptually and methodologically. Indeed, we appear to lag behind our exposure science colleagues in our theories, data, and methods.

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What has geography got to do with it? Using GWR to explore place-specific associations with prenatal care utilization.

GeoJournal

June 2012

Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, and The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 13 Armsby Building, University Park, PA 16802 U.S.A.,

We use a geographically weighted regression (GWR) approach to examine how the relationships between a set of predictors and prenatal care vary across the continental US. At its most fundamental, GWR is an exploratory technique that can facilitate the identification of areas with low prenatal care utilization and help better understand which predictors are associated with prenatal care at specific locations. Our work complements existing prenatal care research in providing an ecological, place-sensitive analysis.

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Job Authority and Breast Cancer.

Soc Forces

January 2013

Department of Sociology & Crime, Law and Justice, The Population Research Institute, 514 Oswald Tower, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802.

Using the 1957-2011 data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, I integrate the gender relations theory, a life course perspective, and a biosocial stress perspective to explore the effect of women's job authority in 1975 (at age 36) and 1993 (at age 54) on breast cancer incidence up to 2011. Findings indicate that women with the authority to hire, fire, and influence others' pay had a significantly higher risk of a breast cancer diagnosis over the next 30 years compared to housewives and employed women with no job authority. Because job authority conferred the highest risk of breast cancer for women who also spent more hours dealing with people at work in 1975, I suggest that the assertion of job authority by women in the 1970s involved stressful interpersonal experiences, such as social isolation and negative social interactions, that may have increased the risk of breast cancer via prolonged dysregulation of the glucocorticoid system and exposure of breast tissue to the adverse effects of chronically elevated cortisol.

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Spatially varying predictors of teenage birth rates among counties in the United States.

Demogr Res

September 2012

Social Science Research Institute and The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 601 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802, USA, Tel: +1-814-659-0990.

BACKGROUND: Limited information is available about teenage pregnancy and childbearing in rural areas, even though approximately 20 percent of the nation's youth live in rural areas. Identifying whether there are differences in the teenage birth rate (TBR) across metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas is important, because these differences may reflect modifiable ecological-level influences such as education, employment, laws, healthcare infrastructure, and policies that could potentially reduce the TBR. OBJECTIVES: The goals of this study are to investigate whether there are spatially varying relationships between the TBR and the independent variables, and if so, whether these associations differ between metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties.

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Family structure and the intergenerational transmission of educational advantage.

Soc Sci Res

January 2012

Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, 211 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802-6207, United States; The Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, United States.

I examine whether the effect of parents' education on children's educational achievement and attainment varies by family structure and, if so, whether this can be explained by differential parenting practices. Using data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988, I find that as parents' education increases, children in single mother families experience a lower boost in their achievement test scores, likelihood of attending any post-secondary schooling, likelihood of completing a 4-year college degree, and years of completed schooling relative to children living with both biological parents. Differences in parents' educational expectations, intergenerational closure, and children's involvement in structured leisure activities partially explain these status transmission differences by family structure.

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The human capital characteristics and household living standards of returning international migrants in Eastern and Southern Africa.

Int Migr

August 2012

Department of African and African American Studies, Faculty Associate, The Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University.

Africa's experience with return migration is not new. However, few empirical studies have examined the social and economic characteristics of returning migrants within the continent. In this study, the human capital endowments and household living standards of returning migrants in Uganda and South Africa are examined using recently available data.

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Untangling the associations among distrust, race, and neighborhood social environment: a social disorganization perspective.

Soc Sci Med

May 2012

Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, and The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 13 Armsby Building, University Park, PA 16802-6211, USA.

Over the past decade, interest in exploring how health care system distrust is associated with individual health outcomes and behaviors has grown substantially, and the racial difference in distrust has been well documented, with African Americans demonstrating higher distrust than whites. However, relatively little is known about whether the individual-level determinants of distrust differ by various dimensions of distrust, and even less is understood regarding whether the race-distrust association could be moderated by the neighborhood social environment. This study used a dual-dimensional distrust scale (values and competence distrust), and applied social disorganization theory to address these gaps.

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Understanding the non-stationary associations between distrust of the health care system, health conditions, and self-rated health in the elderly: a geographically weighted regression approach.

Health Place

May 2012

The Social Science Research Institute, The Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, 803 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802, USA.

The goals of this study are to explore whether health condition is an antecedent extraneous factor for the relationship between health care system distrust and self-rated health among the elderly, and to investigate if the associations among these variables are place-specific. We used logistic geographically weighted regression to analyze data on an elderly sample residents in the Philadelphia metropolitan area. We found that the health conditions of the elderly account for the association between high distrust and poor/fair self-rated health and that the distrust/self-rated health relationship varied spatially.

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Social stratification and adolescent overweight in the United States: how income and educational resources matter across families and schools.

Soc Sci Med

February 2012

Department of Sociology and the Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, 211 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802, United States.

The current study examines how poverty and education in both the family and school contexts influence adolescent weight. Prior research has produced an incomplete and often counterintuitive picture. We develop a framework to better understand how income and education operate alone and in conjunction with each other across families and schools.

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The "rural paradox" refers to standardized mortality rates in rural areas that are unexpectedly low in view of well-known economic and infrastructural disadvantages there. We explore this paradox by incorporating social capital, a promising explanatory factor that has seldom been incorporated into residential mortality research. We do so while being attentive to spatial dependence, a statistical problem often ignored in mortality research.

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Individual health care system distrust and neighborhood social environment: how are they jointly associated with self-rated health?

J Urban Health

October 2011

Social Science Research Institute and the Population Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.

Americans' distrust in the health care system has increased in the past decades; however, little research has explored the impact of distrust on self-rated health and even less is known about whether neighborhood social environment plays a role in understanding the relationship between distrust and self-rated health. This study fills these gaps by investigating both the direct and moderating associations of neighborhood social environment with self-rated health. Our analysis is based on the 2008 Philadelphia Health Management Corporation's household survey and neighborhood-level data.

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