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Mustillo, Sarah; Li, Miao; Ferraro, Kenneth F. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
Most studies of the early origins of adult health rely on summing dichotomously measured negative exposures to measure childhood misfortune (CM), neglect, adversity, or trauma. There are several limitations to this approach, including that it assumes each exposure carries the same level of risk for a particular outcome. Further, it often leads…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Child Neglect, Trauma, Disadvantaged
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Schafer, Markus H.; Wilkinson, Lindsay R.; Ferraro, Kenneth F. – Social Forces, 2013
College-educated adults are healthier than other people in the United States, but selection bias complicates our understanding of how education influences health. This article focuses on the possibility that the health benefits of college may vary according to childhood (mis)fortune and people's propensity to attain a college degree in the first…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Children, Higher Education, Advantaged
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Wilkinson, Lindsay R.; Shippee, Tetyana P.; Ferraro, Kenneth F. – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2012
Occupational mobility is highly valued in American society, but is it consequential to women's health? Previous studies have yielded inconsistent results, but most measured occupational mobility by identifying transitions across occupational categories. Drawing from cumulative inequality theory, this study (1) compares objective and subjective…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Occupational Mobility, Health, Comparative Analysis
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Ferraro, Kenneth F.; Shippee, Tetyana Pylypiv – Gerontologist, 2009
Purpose: This article draws from cumulative disadvantage and life course theories to develop a new theory for the social scientific study of aging. Design and Methods: Five axioms of "cumulative inequality (CI) theory" are articulated to identify how life course trajectories are influenced by early and accumulated inequalities but can be modified…
Descriptors: Gerontology, Pregnancy, Older Adults, Epidemiology
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Schafer, Markus H.; Ferraro, Kenneth F. – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2007
Consistent with a new genre of research on life-course analyses of health-service use, this study explores the consequences of long-term exposure to a risk factor. Drawing from cumulative-disadvantage theory, the study examines whether obesity, especially chronic obesity, increases hospitalization admission and length of stay. Analyses make use of…
Descriptors: Obesity, Hospitals, Risk, Adolescents
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Li, Yunqing; Ferraro, Kenneth F. – Social Forces, 2006
The positive association between volunteering and health has been widely interpreted as evidence of the salutary effect of volunteering during adulthood. Using three waves of data from a national survey, this study uses structural equation models to examine the relationships among volunteering, functional limitations, and depressive symptoms…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Health, National Surveys, Structural Equation Models