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1.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 33(7): 736-42, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19308070

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To examine the role of blame as a mediator of the relationships between perceiver age and gender and children's acceptance of an overweight peer. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study of children's perceptions of their overweight peers using structural equation modeling. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred and ninety-one children between the ages of 3 and 11 years. MEASUREMENTS: Children viewed a videotape of a same-sex peer, dressed to appear overweight, interacting with an adult. After viewing the videotape, children responded to items assessing their perceptions of the child's social and emotional traits and how much the child was to blame for being overweight.Results:Confirmatory factor analysis indicated that the traits loaded on a single factor, acceptance. RESULTS: of analyses for our structural equation model indicated that as blame increased, acceptance of the peer decreased. The relationships between gender and blame and gender and acceptance were not significant. Children were categorized into three age groups (3-4, 5-8 and 9-11 years) to examine the influence of age. Children between 5 and 8 years of age were less likely to blame the model compared with younger and older children. CONCLUSION: Preschoolers reported the lowest acceptance, indicating a need for intervention for children in this age range. Furthermore, it will be important to conduct longitudinal studies to determine the influence of interventions as the child passes through different developmental stages.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior/psychology , Overweight/psychology , Child , Child, Preschool , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Peer Group , Prejudice , Sex Factors , Stereotyped Behavior , Videotape Recording
2.
J Adolesc Health ; 29(6): 386-94, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11728888

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To construct and estimate a model that contains a reciprocal relationship between smoking and drinking and to test whether the gateway drug thesis or the cumulative risk behaviors thesis best fits the data. METHODS: Data (n = 630) are from a survey of all students (50% female; aged 16.2 years on average; 2.4 grade point average; and 57% residing in homes with both mother and father present) in a rural, tobacco-growing county's two high schools, one public (85%) and one private, in 1993. The survey was conducted by the schools as part of their alcohol and other drugs (AOD) prevention programs and was coordinated by the county AOD Council. Students completed the questionnaires in their homerooms. Endogenous predictors of drinking and smoking include student's perception of adult drug behavior, peer pressure to drink, degree to which their friends' drink, and attitudes toward drinking and smoking. Path coefficients were estimated by using LISREL. RESULTS: The strong correlation between smoking and drinking resulted from shared causes, rather than from the effects of one type of drug use on the other. Approval of drinking had the strongest association with being a drinker (beta =.57) and with being a smoker (beta =.37). Those who found smoking offensive were less likely to be a smoker (beta = -.25). However, attitude toward smoking was not associated with being a drinker. Having drinking friends increased both the likelihood of being a drinker (beta =.29) and of being a smoker (beta =.23). Peer pressure to drink increased the likelihood of being a smoker (beta =.14) and of being a drinker (beta =.12). Students with lower grade point averages, males, older students, students in public school, and students with family structures other than both parents living in the same household were more likely to be a drinker and were more likely to be a smoker. CONCLUSIONS: Our results support the cumulative risk behaviors thesis. The link between both high-risk behaviors, smoking and drinking, results from common causes rather than from drinking leading to smoking.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Drinking/epidemiology , Rural Health , Smoking/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Alcohol Drinking/psychology , Comorbidity , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Regression Analysis , Risk , Smoking/psychology , Social Environment , United States/epidemiology
3.
Sociol Focus ; 25(3): 241-55, 1992 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12289800

ABSTRACT

"This study examines distance of 1975-80 interstate migration [in the United States] and several explanations for the relations between distance and characteristic of migrants and locations.... Observations are individual records from the 1980 one-in-ten-thousand PUMS files. The sample is restricted to nonblack, noninstitutionalized head of households, age 25 to 64 in 1980.... We find outmigration is shaped by characteristics of individuals; however, distance of migration is shaped by characteristics at locations. Findings lend support to an interpretation of distance reflecting psychic costs and information and are consistent with a cost/benefit view of factors contributing to distance of migration."


Subject(s)
Health Services Accessibility , Population Dynamics , Transients and Migrants , Americas , Demography , Developed Countries , Emigration and Immigration , Geography , North America , Population , United States
4.
Public Health Rep ; 107(4): 389-96, 1992.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1641434

ABSTRACT

Migration adds a complex dimension to the task of those who plan and allocate resources for health care. The authors offer a methodology for estimating the contribution of migration to the incidence of cancer, allow for age- and sex-specific cancer risks, and estimate, by country, the impact of recent migration on the annual incidence of cancer in Florida. Cancer and migration data were used to develop estimates of the number of cancer cases for Florida counties that were attributable to recent migrants. A net gain and loss ratio was calculated for new cancer cases in 1980 resulting from the 1975-80 migration pattern. Florida data was used because that State has one of the highest crude cancer incidence rates in the nation, is one of the most populous States, and has a population growth from migration rather than from natural increase. Preliminary findings on the relationship between cancer health services resources and net cancer rates from migration are discussed. County cancer health services resources had a strong positive relationship to population size, but the impact of migration on cancer incidence was in a curvilinear relationship to population size.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms/epidemiology , Transients and Migrants , Cancer Care Facilities/supply & distribution , Female , Florida/epidemiology , Humans , Incidence , Male , Population Surveillance , Risk Factors
5.
Popul Stud (Camb) ; 27(1): 127-34, 1973 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22074202

ABSTRACT

Abstract A major finding of the 1960 'Growth of American Families' (GAF) study was that whites and blacks without southern rural experience had similar fertility. This paper reports on a re-examination of this finding with a substantially larger black sample. Data from the 1967 Survey of Economic Opportunity demonstrated that the residence background classification utilized in the GAF study defeated, in part, the attempt to remove the effects of rural experience on fertility. Indigenous urban blacks had 25% higher fertility than indigenous urban whites. The fertility of urban black migrants out of the rural South was sharply curtailed in contrast to those remaining in the rural South. Although urban blacks of southern rural background had nominally higher fertility than indigenous urban blacks, the difference was neither statistically nor substantively significant. These results demand a re-ordering of the interpretation of the impact that migration has on urban black fertility and the white-black differential in fertility.

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