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State level structural racism and alcohol and tobacco use behaviors
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New paper by Faculty Associate Kerry Green examines structural racism impacts among a national probability sample of Black Americans
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Research
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Selected Research
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State of Hispanic Race and Ethnicity: Census 2020 Changes and Implications For Addressing Social Inequalities
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Half-day Conference by Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity and co-sponsored with MPRC
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Coming Up
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Stephane Helleringer, Johns Hopkins
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The potential of computer vision tools for improving demographic measurement in low-income countries
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Coming Up
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Stephen Gilman, NICHD
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The developmental origins of disparities in common mental disorders
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Coming Up
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Steven Martin, Urban Institute
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Rising mid-life mortality in the US: When did it start, and who is it affecting?
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Coming Up
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Structural Racism and Population Health: The Role of Race, Socioeconomic Status and Context
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Caryn Bell, African American Studies, examines the effects of macro-level structural racism on population health
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Resources
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Seed Grant Program
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Seed Grants Awarded
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Susan Parker contributes to WSJ story on Mexico's Prospera program
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Widely copied program cut by new government
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News
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Susan Parker discusses the implementation of successful policies that reduced poverty in Oaxaca, Mexico
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The MPRC Associate Director was invited to share her expertise in the evaluation of public policies with the Wilson Center's Mexico Institute
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News
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Taylor Hargrove, University of North Carolina
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Health Contextualized: Inequalities in Physiological Function at the Intersection of Race, Skin Color, and Place
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Coming Up
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The Consequences of Contact with the Criminal Justice System for Health in Emerging Adulthood
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A rapidly growing literature has documented the adverse social, economic and, recently, health impacts of experiencing incarceration in the United States. Despite the insights that this work has provided in consistently documenting the deleterious effects of incarceration, little is known about the specific timing of criminal justice contact and early health consequences during the transition from adolescence to adulthood-a critical period in the life course, particularly for the development of poor health. Previous literature on the role of incarceration has also been hampered by the difficulties of parsing out the influence that incarceration exerts on health from the social and economic confounding forces that are linked to both criminal justice contact and health. This paper addresses these two gaps in the literature by examining the association between incarceration and health in the United States during the transition to adulthood, and by using an analytic approach that better isolates the association of incarceration with health from the multitude of confounders which could be alternatively driving this association. In this endeavor, we make use of variable-rich data from The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (n = 10,785) and a non-parametric Bayesian machine learning technique- Bayesian Additive Regression Trees. Our results suggest that the experience of incarceration at this stage of the life course increases the probability of depression, adversely affects the perception of general health status, but has no effect on the probability of developing hypertension in early adulthood. These findings signal that incarceration in emerging adulthood is an important stressor that can have immediate implications for mental and general health in early adulthood, and may help to explain long lasting implications incarceration has for health across the life course.
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MPRC People
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Lauren Porter, Ph.D.
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Lauren Porter Publications