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1.
Soc Sci Med ; 165: 233-245, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27499069

ABSTRACT

Childhood vaccination resistance has given rise to outbreaks of diseases, which had been virtually eliminated in the developed world. A parent's decision to forego vaccination for their child is a private choice that can have collective outcomes. This article takes a two-pronged approach to unraveling the puzzle of perceiving vaccines as dangerous in view of evidence that testifies to their effectiveness and relative safety. First, it draws on fifty-seven years of newspaper articles on vaccines to outline the public narratives. Second, it uses school-level data from New York and California to explore how these public narratives shape a geography of vaccination rates. We have two main findings. First, we find that while risk has always been a feature of vaccine narratives, the perception that the risks of vaccines out-weigh the benefits has grown. By the millennium, some began to view medical treatments as sources of risk rather than cure. Second, our geography of childhood vaccination reveals two distinct vaccine worlds. Affluence governs one world. Poverty governs the other. The geographic locales where vaccination rates are low enable us to contrast the difference between imagining risk, the prerogative of the affluent, and being at risk, the fate of the poor. Vaccination resistance speaks directly to a Culture of Health as it poses questions about the collective perception of risk and its relation to social inequality and solidarity.


Subject(s)
Parents/psychology , Pediatrics/methods , Vaccination/standards , Anti-Vaccination Movement/psychology , Anti-Vaccination Movement/trends , California , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Income/statistics & numerical data , Income/trends , New York , Pediatrics/trends , Risk Factors , Vaccination/trends
2.
Demography ; 52(2): 401-32, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25749487

ABSTRACT

Mothers in the United States use a combination of employment, public transfers, and private safety nets to cushion the economic losses of romantic union dissolution, but changes in maternal labor force participation, government transfer programs, and private social networks may have altered the economic impact of union dissolution over time. Using nationally representative panels from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) from 1984 to 2007, we show that the economic consequences of divorce have declined since the 1980s owing to the growth in married women's earnings and their receipt of child support and income from personal networks. In contrast, the economic consequences of cohabitation dissolution were modest in the 1980s but have worsened over time. Cohabiting mothers' income losses associated with union dissolution now closely resemble those of divorced mothers. These trends imply that changes in marital stability have not contributed to rising income instability among families with children, but trends in the extent and economic costs of cohabitation have likely contributed to rising income instability for less-advantaged children.


Subject(s)
Divorce/economics , Divorce/trends , Family Characteristics , Marriage/trends , Mothers/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Public Assistance/statistics & numerical data , Social Support , Socioeconomic Factors , United States , Women, Working/statistics & numerical data
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