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The Long-Term Effects of Early Lead Exposure: Evidence from a Case of Environmental Negligence
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Sergio Urzua, University of Maryland; Tomás Rau, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile; Loreto Reyes, Ministry of Finance, Chile; 2013-015
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The modern mortgage set the stage for the US baby boom
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The dramatic changes in the accessibility of home ownership may have “set the stage” for the baby boom
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Selected Research
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The nexus of the risk of depression and residential mobility for urban poor mothers in Nairobi
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Residential mobility is associated with dislocation and stress
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The Nuances of Blackness: Race, Complexion and Mental Health
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Verna M. Keith, Professor, Department of Sociology, Texas A & M University
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The Rejection Sensitivity Model: Sexual Minority Adolescents in Context
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Theoretical and empirical integration of the rejection sensitivity (RS) model to sexual minority people is one of the few attempts to extend existing theoretical frameworks that explain mental health disparities for this population, namely the minority stress framework (Meyer, 2003 ) and its extensions (Hatzenbuehler, 2009 ; Testa, Habarth, Peta, Balsam, & Bockting, 2015 ). Theoretical origins of RS are rooted in the desire to understand how rejection from significant others affects subsequent other close relationships (Downey & Feldman, 1996 ). This was later extended to conceptualize rejection based on membership of a stigmatized group and modified to understand sexual orientation-related RS among sexual minorities (Dyar, Feinstein, Eaton, & London, 2016 ; Pachankis, Goldfried, & Ramrattan, 2008 ). Feinstein ( 2019 ) brings new life to this adapted application by grounding and integrating the basic tenets of sexual orientation-related RS alongside a critical health compromising process of minority stress: vigilance. Meyer theorized vigilance as a core form of proximal minority stressors and explains that “LGB people learn to anticipate—indeed, expect—negative regard from members of the dominant culture. To ward off potential negative regard, discrimination, and violence, they must be vigilant” and this vigilance is “related to feared possible (even if imagined) negative events” (Meyer, 2003 , p. 680–681). Feinstein explains that existing theoretical frameworks (Hatzenbuehler, 2009 ; Meyer, 2003 ) mention vigilance and RS as important processes, but lack a comprehensive integration of these concepts. Given that schemas for RS are formed early in the life course, we focus on the applicability to sexual minority adolescents, and other marginalized groups.
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MPRC People
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Jessica N Fish, Ph.D.
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Jessica N Fish Publications
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The relationship between familial deaths and one's own mortality among Black Americans
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Familial loss increases midlife mortality risk among Black Americans
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The Role of Social Support in Moderating the Relationship between Race and Hypertension in a Low-Income, Urban, Racially Integrated Community
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In the US, African Americans have a higher prevalence of hypertension than Whites. Previous studies show that social support contributes to the racial differences in hypertension but are limited in accounting for the social and environmental effects of racial residential segregation. We examined whether the association between race and hypertension varies by the level of social support among African Americans and Whites living in similar social and environmental conditions, specifically an urban, low-income, racially integrated community. Using data from the Exploring Health Disparities in Integrated Communities-Southwest Baltimore (EHDIC-SWB) sample, we hypothesized that social support moderates the relationship between race and hypertension and the racial difference in hypertension is smaller as the level of social support increases. Hypertension was defined as having systolic blood pressure greater than 140 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure greater than 90 mmHg, or the participant reports of taking antihypertensive medication(s). The study only included participants that self-reported as “Black/African American” or “White.” Social support was measured as functional social support and marital status. After adjusting for demographics and health-related characteristics, we found no interaction between social support and race (DUFSS score, prevalence ratio 1.00; 95% confidence interval 0.99, 1.01; marital status, prevalence ratio 1.02; 95% confidence interval 0.86, 1.21); thus the hypothesis was not supported. A plausible explanation is that the buffering factor of social support cannot overcome the social and environmental conditions which the participants live in. Further, these findings emphasize social and environmental conditions of participants in EHDIC-SWB may equally impact race and hypertension.
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Retired Persons
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Caryn Bell, Ph.D.
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Caryn Bell Publications
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The role of weight perception in race differences in body mass index by education among women
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Caryn N. Bell University of Maryland: Loneke T. Blackman Carr Duke University: 2019-006
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The Short- and Medium-Term Impacts of Household Water Supply and Sanitation on Diarrhea in Rural India
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Raymond Guiteras, University of Maryland; Esther Duflo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Michael Greenstone, University of Chicago; Thomas Clasen, Emory University; 2015-008
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Theodore Joyce, Baruch College
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The Impact of Parental Involvement Laws on the Abortion Rate of Minors
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