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Steinberg study contradicts long-standing 'link' between abortion and suicide
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Equivalent risk before and after abortion
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News
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Insurance coverage and health care utilization among Asian youth before and after the Affordable Care Act
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Objective: We examined changes in insurance coverage and health care utilization associated with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) among subgroups of Asian youth relative to non-Latino white youth. Methods: Data were from the 2010-2017 American Community Survey and National Health Interview Survey. Difference-in-difference models were used to examine changes in insurance coverage and health care utilization associated with the ACA among subgroups of Asian youth relative to white youth and subgroups of Asian youth in households below 200% of the federal poverty level (FPL) relative to comparable white youth. Results: Since the implementation of the ACA, insurance coverage increased among all Asian subgroups and white youth. The magnitude of the increase in insurance coverage was larger among Asian subgroups than white youth. More pronounced increases were found among almost all Asian subgroups in households below 200% FPL. Changes in health care utilization were limited and varied by subgroup. Increases in well-child visits were observed only among Chinese and “other” Asian youth. Conclusions: Insurance coverage increased among Asian youth after the implementation of the ACA. Improvements in health care utilization were limited and differed by subgroups. Programs to improve health care utilization should be tailored to Asian youth according to subgroup.
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MPRC People
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Jie Chen, Ph.D.
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Jie Chen Publications
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Depression and contraceptive behavioral patterns: Analyzing two longitudinal studies
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Julia Steinberg, Family Science
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Resources
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Seed Grant Program
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Seed Grants Awarded
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Utilization of essential preventive health services among Asians after the implementation of the preventive services provisions of the Affordable Care Act
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Utilization of cost-effective essential preventive health services increased after the implementation of the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) provision that non-grandfathered private insurers provide cost-effective preventive services without cost sharing in 2010. Little is known, however, whether this change is also observed among Asians in the US. We examined patterns of preventive services utilization among Asian subgroups relative to non-Latino whites (whites) after the implementation of the ACA’s preventive services provisions. Using 2013–2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data, we examined utilization trends in preventive services among Asian Indians, Chinese, Filipinos, and other Asians relative to whites. We also ran logistic regression models to estimate the likelihood of having received each of the seven essential preventive services (routine checkups, flu vaccinations, cholesterol screenings, blood pressure checkups, Papanicolaou “pap” tests, mammograms, and colorectal cancer screenings). Compared to whites, Asians had higher rates of utilization of routine checkups, cholesterol screenings, and flu vaccinations, but they had lower utilization rates of blood pressure checkups, pap tests, and mammograms. The patterns of preventive services utilization differed across the Asian subgroups. All Asian subgroups, except for Filipinos, were less likely to have pap tests or mammograms than whites. Moreover, we observed a decreasing trend in having pap tests, mammograms, or colorectal cancer screenings among all Asian subgroups between 2013 and 2016. Our findings suggest that there are low cancer screening rates across Asian subgroups. This indicates the need for programs tailored to specific Asian subgroups to improve cancer screening.
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MPRC People
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Jie Chen, Ph.D.
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Jie Chen Publications
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Life and Death in the American City: Men’s Life Expectancy in 25 Major American Cities From 1990 to 2015
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The past several decades have witnessed growing geographic disparities in life expectancy within the United States, yet the mortality experience of U.S. cities has received little attention. We examine changes in men’s life expectancy at birth for the 25 largest U.S. cities from 1990 to 2015, using mortality data with city of residence identifiers. We reveal remarkable increases in life expectancy for several U.S. cities. Men’s life expectancy increased by 13.7 years in San Francisco and Washington, DC, and by 11.8 years in New York between 1990 and 2015, during which overall U.S. life expectancy increased by just 4.8 years. A significant fraction of gains in the top-performing cities relative to the U.S. average is explained by reductions in HIV/AIDS and homicide during the 1990s and 2000s. Although black men tended to see larger life expectancy gains than white men in most cities, changes in socioeconomic and racial population composition also contributed to these trends.
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MPRC People
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Michel Boudreaux, Ph.D.
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Michel Boudreaux Publications
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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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Advanced School Progression Relative to Age and Early Family Formation in Mexico
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Mónica Caudillo Demography article re-examines education outcomes in light of advanced school progression by age
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Research
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Selected Research
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Boudreaux examines men's life expectancy in cities
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Demography paper with External Affiliate Andrew Fenelon finds "remarkable increases"
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Research
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Selected Research
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Michel Boudreaux's study on Men's Life Expectancy published in Demography
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Men's life expectancy has seen "remarkable increase" for several U.S. cities
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News
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Jessica Fish and Bradley Boekeloo win Data Contract to Study LGBTQ Health Disparities
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They are one of the four research groups chosen for the data contract
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News