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Journals Journal of Health and Social B...

Journal of Health and Social Behavior

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37933536/state-of-confusion-ohio-s-restrictive-abortion-landscape-and-the-production-of-uncertainty-in-reproductive-health-care
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Danielle Czarnecki, Danielle Bessett, Hillary Gyuras, Alison H Norris, Michelle L McGowan
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
November 7, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37905532/health-care-stereotype-threat-and-sexual-and-gender-minority-well-being
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
R Kyle Saunders, Dawn C Carr, Amy M Burdette
Sexual and gender minorities (SGMs) have experienced progressive change over the last 50 years. However, this group still reports worse health and health care experiences. An innovative survey instrument that applies stereotype threat to the health care setting, health care stereotype threat (HCST), offers a new avenue to examine these disparities. We harmonized two national probability data sets of SGMs-Generations and TransPop-capturing 503 gay men, 297 lesbians, 467 bisexuals, and 221 trans people...
October 31, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37905523/high-stakes-treatment-negotiations-gone-awry-the-importance-of-interactions-for-understanding-treatment-advocacy-and-patient-resistance
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra Tate, Karen Lutfey Spencer
Doctors (and sociologists) have a long history of struggling to understand why patients seek medical help yet resist treatment recommendations. Explanations for resistance have pointed to macrostructural changes, such as the rise of the engaged patient or decline of physician authority. Rather than assuming that concepts such as resistance, authority, or engagement are exogenous phenomena transmitted via conversational conduits, we examine how they are dynamically co-constituted interactionally. Using conversation analysis to analyze a videotaped interaction of an oncology patient resisting the treatment recommendation even though she might die without treatment, we show how sustained resistance manifests in and through her doctor's actions...
October 31, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37904493/cumulative-unionization-and-physical-health-disparities-among-older-adults
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiaowen Han, Tom VanHeuvelen, Jeylan T Mortimer, Zachary Parolin
Whereas previous research shows that union membership is associated with improved health, static measurements have been used to test dynamic theories linking the two. We construct a novel measure of cumulative unionization, tracking individuals across their entire careers, to examine health consequences in older adulthood. We use data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (1970-2019) and predict self-rated health, functional limitations, and chronic health conditions in ages 60 to 79 using cumulative unionization measured during respondents' careers...
October 31, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37864410/hurt-on-both-sides-political-differences-in-health-and-well-being-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Max E Coleman, Matthew A Andersson
Republicans and conservatives report better self-rated health and well-being compared to Democrats and liberals, yet they are more likely to reside in geographic areas with heavy COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. This harmed health on "both sides" of political divides, occurring in a time of rapid sociopolitical upheaval, warrants the revisiting of psychosocial mechanisms linked to political health differences. Drawing on national Gallup data (early 2021), we find that predicted differences in health or well-being vary substantially by ideology, party, voting behavior, and policy beliefs, with model fit depending on how politics are measured...
October 21, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37830769/covid-19-s-unequal-toll-differences-in-health-related-quality-of-life-by-gendered-and-racialized-groups
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Konrad Franco, Caitlin Patler, Whitney Laster Pirtle
We examine whether the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with changes to daily activity limitations due to poor physical or mental health and whether those changes were different within and between gendered and racialized groups. We analyze 497,302 observations across the 2019 and 2020 waves of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey. Among White men and women, the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with fewer days of health-related activity limitations and decreased frequent activity limitation (≥14 days in the past month) compared to the prepandemic period...
October 13, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37830412/sleep-duration-differences-by-education-from-middle-to-older-adulthood-does-employment-stratification-contribute-to-gendered-leveling
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jess M Meyer
Sleep duration changes across the life course and differs by education in the United States. However, little research has examined whether educational differences in sleep duration change over age-or whether sleep duration trajectories over age differ by education. This study uses a life course approach to analyze American Time Use Survey data (N = 60,908), examining how educational differences in weekday sleep duration change from middle to older adulthood (ages 40-79). For men only, differences in total sleep time between individuals with less than a high school degree and those with more education converge in older adulthood...
October 13, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37830411/peeking-under-the-hood-of-job-stress-how-men-and-women-s-stress-levels-vary-by-typologies-of-job-quality-and-family-composition
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Grace Venechuk
Changes to work and family norms and polices over the last several decades have reshaped both the job quality and the nature of job and family formation in the United States. Neoliberal policies have generated a slew of flexible but precarious working conditions; labor force participation is now the modal path for all genders regardless of parental or marital status. Leveraging data on 3,419 working men and women from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, I use granular measures of job quality to identify distinct job quality-family typologies among both men and women in early adulthood to midadulthood to examine differential implications for psychological and physiological stress...
October 13, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37776198/unpacking-intersectional-inequities-in-flu-vaccination-by-sexuality-gender-and-race-ethnicity-in-the-united-states
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ning Hsieh
Health care research has long overlooked the intersection of multiple social inequalities. This study examines influenza vaccination inequities at the intersection of sexuality, gender, and race-ethnicity. Using data from the 2013 to 2018 National Health Interview Survey (N = 166,908), the study shows that sexual, gender, and racial-ethnic identities jointly shaped flu vaccination. Specifically, White gay men had the highest vaccination rate (56%), while Black bisexual women had the lowest rate (23%)...
September 30, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37776190/the-mental-weight-of-discrimination-the-relationship-between-perceived-interpersonal-weight-discrimination-and-suicidality-in-the-united-states
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carlyn E Graham, Michelle L Frisco
Extant research has investigated the relationship between body weight and suicidality because obesity is highly stigmatized, leading to social marginalization and discrimination, yet has produced mixed results. Scholars have speculated that factors associated with body weight, such as weight discrimination, may better predict suicidality than body weight itself. We consider this possibility among a sample of 12,057 adult participants ages 33 to 43 in Wave V of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health through investigation of the relationships between weight discrimination and two dimensions of suicidality-suicide ideation and attempts...
September 30, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37688490/disease-scapegoating-and-social-contexts-examining-social-contexts-of-the-support-for-racist-naming-of-covid-19-on-twitter
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yun Lu
In early 2020, when COVID-19 began to spread in the United States, many Twitter users called it the "Chinese virus," blaming racial outgroups for the pandemic. I collected tweets containing the "Chinese virus" derivatives posted from March to August 2020 by users within the United States and created a data set with 141,290 tweets published by 50,695 users. I calculated the ratio of users who supported the racist naming of COVID-19 per county and merged Twitter data with the county-level census. Multilevel regression models show that counties with higher COVID-19 mortality or infection rates have more support for the racist naming...
September 9, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37675877/structural-sexism-and-preventive-health-care-use-in-the-united-states
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily C Dore, Surbhi Shrivastava, Patricia Homan
Preventive health care use can reduce the risk of disease, disability, and death. Thus, it is critical to understand factors that shape preventive care use. A growing body of research identifies structural sexism as a driver of population health, but it remains unknown if structural sexism is linked to preventive care use and, if so, whether the relationship differs for women and men. Gender performance and gendered power and resource allocation perspectives lead to competing hypotheses regarding these questions...
September 7, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37592832/the-effect-of-welfare-state-policy-spending-on-the-equalization-of-socioeconomic-status-disparities-in-mental-health
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Parbst, Blair Wheaton
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 17, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37572045/analysis-of-sex-specific-gene-by-cohort-and-genetic-correlation-by-cohort-interaction-in-educational-and-reproductive-outcomes-using-the-uk-biobank-data
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Boyan Zheng, Jason Fletcher, Jie Song, Qiongshi Lu
Synthesizing prior gene-by-cohort (G×C) interaction studies, we theorize that changes in genetic effects by social conditions depend on the level of resource constraints, the distribution and use of resources, structural constraints, and constraints on individual choice. Motivated by the theory, we explored several sex-specific G×C trends across a set of outcomes using 30 birth cohorts of UK Biobank data (N = 400,000). We find that genetic coefficients on years of schooling and secondary educational attainment substantially decrease, but genetic coefficients on college attainments only moderately increase...
August 12, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37572020/racing-the-machine-data-analytic-technologies-and-institutional-inscription-of-racialized-health-injustice
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taylor Marion Cruz
Recent scientific and policy initiatives frame clinical settings as sites for intervening upon inequality. Electronic health records and data analytic technologies offer opportunity to record standard data on education, employment, social support, and race-ethnicity, and numerous audiences expect biomedicine to redress social determinants based on newly available data. However, little is known on how health practitioners and institutional actors view data standardization in relation to inequity. This article examines a public safety-net health system's expansion of race, ethnicity, and language data collection, drawing on 10 months of ethnographic fieldwork and 32 qualitative interviews with providers, clinic staff, data scientists, and administrators...
August 12, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37378678/-i-love-you-to-death-social-networks-and-the-widowhood-effect-on-mortality
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin Cornwell, Tianyao Qu
Research on "the widowhood effect" shows that mortality rates are greater among people who have recently lost a spouse. There are several medical and psychological explanations for this (e.g., "broken heart syndrome") and sociological explanations that focus on spouses' shared social-environmental exposures. We expand on sociological perspectives by arguing that couples' social connections to others play a role in this phenomenon. Using panel data on 1,169 older adults from the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project, we find that mortality is associated with how well embedded one's spouse is in one's own social network...
June 28, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37377057/a-matter-of-time-racialized-time-and-the-production-of-health-disparities
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cynthia G Colen, Kelsey J Drotning, Liana C Sayer, Bruce Link
An expansive and methodologically varied literature designed to investigate racial disparities in health now exists. Empirical evidence points to an overlapping, complex web of social conditions that accelerate the pace of aging and erodes long-term health outcomes among people of color, especially Black Americans. However, a social exposure-or lack thereof-that is rarely mentioned is time use. The current paper was specifically designed to address this shortcoming. First, we draw on extant research to illustrate how and why time is a critical source of racial disparities in health...
June 28, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37350342/painful-feelings-opioids-as-tools-for-avoiding-emotional-labor-in-hospital-work
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra Brewer
How do clinicians manage the negative emotions that emerge when hospital patients are dissatisfied with their pain treatment? Drawing on a 21-month hospital ethnography, I show that clinicians view opioids as tools that can allow them to avoid engaging in emotional labor with dissatisfied pain patients. I detail two different strategies that clinicians pursued. Through permissive prescription , clinicians used intravenous (IV) opioids liberally to placate unhappy pain patients, temporarily minimizing patients' emotional needs...
June 23, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37334797/the-buffering-effect-of-state-eviction-and-foreclosure-policies-for-mental-health-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-in-the-united-states
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Courtney E Boen, Lisa A Keister, Christina M Gibson-Davis, Anneliese Luck
The COVID-19 pandemic spurred an economic downturn that may have eroded population mental health, especially for renters and homeowners who experienced financial hardship and were at risk of housing loss. Using household-level data from the Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey (n = 805,223; August 2020-August 2021) and state-level data on eviction/foreclosure bans, we estimated linear probability models with two-way fixed effects to (1) examine links between COVID-related financial hardship and anxiety/depression and (2) assess whether state eviction/foreclosure bans buffered the detrimental mental health impacts of financial hardship...
June 19, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37332176/black-mothers-concern-for-their-children-as-a-measure-of-vicarious-racism-related-vigilance-and-allostatic-load
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathryn P Daniels, Marilyn D Thomas, David H Chae, Amani M Allen
This study investigates the relationship between allostatic load and a novel form of altruistic racism-related fear, or concern for how racism might harm another, which we term vicarious racism-related vigilance. Using a subsample of Black mothers from the African American Women's Heart & Health Study (N = 140), which includes detailed health and survey data on a community sample of Black women in the San Francisco Bay Area, this study investigates the relationship between Black mothers' experiences with racism-related vigilance as it relates to their children and allostatic load-a multisystem metric of underlying health across multiple biological systems...
June 18, 2023: Journal of Health and Social Behavior
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