10 results on '"Boen, Courtney E."'
Search Results
2. Volunteer Retirement and Well-Being in Older Adults: A Longitudinal Study.
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Russell, Allison R., Boen, Courtney E., and Handy, Femida
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OLDER people , *VOLUNTEERS , *VOLUNTEER service , *WELL-being , *RETIREMENT planning , *RETIREMENT - Abstract
The extant literature on volunteering has focused primarily on the many benefits of volunteering for older adults. However, the question rarely investigated is whether these benefits dissipate when older adults retire from their volunteering. Given the U.S. policy context wherein volunteering is promoted as a solution to the problems of aging, this research investigates the association between the loss of one's volunteering role through retirement and well-being. Utilizing three waves of the U.S.-based National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP) (2005–2016) and a fixed-effects modeling approach, we find that the well-being of older adults, measured as self-reported health, happiness, and depressive risk, is negatively associated with volunteer retirement. Our study contributes to the literature on well-being and volunteering for older adults and is the first study focusing on this critical transition point in the life of older volunteers. In addition, policymakers and organizations must broaden their focus to include not only the recruitment and retention of older adult volunteers but also the transition out of volunteering that many of them will eventually face. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Vicarious exposure to the criminal legal system among parents and siblings.
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Boen, Courtney E., Olson, Hannah, and Lee, Hedwig
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CRIMINAL justice system , *AFRICAN American parents , *SIBLINGS , *WHITE parents , *PRISONERS' families , *HISPANIC American parents , *RACIAL minorities - Abstract
Objective: This study documents life course patterns of vicarious exposure to the criminal legal system among parents and siblings in the United States. Background: The criminal legal system shapes family outcomes in important ways. Still, life course patterns of vicarious exposure to the system—especially to lower‐level contacts—among parents and siblings are not well documented. Method: Using longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, Kaplan–Meier survival curves, and Cox regression models, we estimate cumulative risks of vicarious exposure to arrest, probation, and incarceration among parents (n = 3885 parents; 185,444 person‐years) and siblings (n = 1875; 44,766 person‐years) and examine disparities by race–ethnicity, gender, and education, and at their intersections. Results: Vicarious exposure to the system is common—but highly unequal—among parents and siblings. Racially minoritized parents and siblings had greater levels and earlier risks of exposure. For example, by age 50, an estimated one in five Black parents experienced having a child incarcerated, a risk about twice as high as White and 50% higher than Latinx parents. By age 26, an estimated 6 in 10 Black young people with brothers experienced having a brother arrested; more than 4 in 10 experienced a brother on probation; and more than 3 in 10 experienced brother incarceration. For many estimates, racialized inequities in risks of vicarious system exposure widened at higher levels of education. Conclusion: These findings provide essential context for understanding the role of the criminal legal system in maintaining and exacerbating family inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Structural Racism and Quantitative Causal Inference: A Life Course Mediation Framework for Decomposing Racial Health Disparities.
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Graetz, Nick, Boen, Courtney E., and Esposito, Michael H.
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INSTITUTIONAL racism , *HEALTH equity , *LIFE course approach , *RACE discrimination - Abstract
Quantitative studies of racial health disparities often use static measures of self-reported race and conventional regression estimators, which critics argue is inconsistent with social-constructivist theories of race, racialization, and racism. We demonstrate an alternative counterfactual approach to explain how multiple racialized systems dynamically shape health over time, examining racial inequities in cardiometabolic risk in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. This framework accounts for the dynamics of time-varying confounding and mediation that is required in operationalizing a "race" variable as part of a social process (racism) rather than a separable, individual characteristic. We decompose the observed disparity into three types of effects: a controlled direct effect ("unobserved racism"), proportions attributable to interaction ("racial discrimination"), and pure indirect effects ("emergent discrimination"). We discuss the limitations of counterfactual approaches while highlighting how they can be combined with critical theories to quantify how interlocking systems produce racial health inequities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Criminal Justice Contacts and Psychophysiological Functioning in Early Adulthood: Health Inequality in the Carceral State.
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Boen, Courtney E.
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HEALTH of young adults , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *CRIMINAL justice system , *MEDIATION (Statistics) , *MASS incarceration , *MENTAL health of prisoners - Abstract
Despite increased attention to the links between the criminal justice system and health, how criminal justice contacts shape health and contribute to racial health disparities remains to be better understood. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (N = 5,488) and several analytic techniques-including a quasi-treatment-control design, treatment-weighting procedures, and mediation analyses-this study examines how criminal justice contacts shape inflammatory and depressive risk and contribute to black-white health gaps. Findings revealed that incarceration is associated with increased C-reactive protein and depressive risk, particularly for individuals who experienced long durations of incarceration. Arrests are also associated with mental health, and mediation analyses showed that racial disparities in arrests and incarceration were drivers of black-white gaps in depressive symptoms. Together, this study provides new evidence of the role of the criminal justice system in shaping health and patterning black-white health gaps from adolescence through early adulthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Longer-but Harder-Lives?: The Hispanic Health Paradox and the Social Determinants of Racial, Ethnic, and Immigrant-Native Health Disparities from Midlife through Late Life.
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Boen, Courtney E. and Hummer, Robert A.
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HEALTH of Hispanic Americans , *HEALTH equity , *DISEASE risk factors , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *HEALTH of immigrants , *LONGEVITY , *HEALTH of African Americans , *WHITE people - Abstract
Though Hispanics live long lives, whether a "Hispanic paradox" extends to older-age health remains unclear, as do the social processes underlying racial-ethnic and immigrant-native health disparities. Using data from the Health and Retirement Study (2004-2012; N = 6,581), we assess the health of U.S.- and foreign-born Hispanics relative to U.S.-born whites and blacks and examine the socioeconomic, stress, and behavioral pathways contributing to health disparities. Findings indicate higher disability, depressive, metabolic, and inflammatory risk for Hispanics relative to whites and similar health profiles among Hispanics and blacks. We find limited evidence of a healthy immigrant pattern among foreign-born Hispanics. While socioeconomic factors account for Hispanic-white gaps in inflammation, disparities in other outcomes persist after adjustment for socioeconomic status, due in part to group differences in stress exposure. Hispanics may live long lives, but their lives are characterized by more socioeconomic hardship, stress, and health risk than whites and similar health risks as blacks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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7. Net worth poverty and adult health.
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Gibson-Davis, Christina, Boen, Courtney E., Keister, Lisa A., and Lowell, Warren
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HEALTH status indicators , *POVERTY , *FINANCIAL statements , *ADULTS - Abstract
This study broadens the traditional focus on income as the primary measure of economic deprivation by providing the first analysis of wealth deprivation, or net worth poverty (NWP), and adult health. Net worth poverty—having wealth (assets minus debts) less than one-fourth of the federal poverty line—likely exacerbates the negative effects of income poverty (IP). In 2019, one-third of US households were net worth poor, with substantially higher rates among Black (60%) relative to White (25%) households. We estimate longitudinal growth curve (i.e., linear mixed effects) models to test how NWP, IP, and the interaction of the two predict a diverse set of health measures. We also consider whether NWP resulting from either low assets or high debts is more predictive of health outcomes and test for heterogeneous associations by race. Data come from Panel Study of Income Dynamics on 8,962 individuals ages 25 to 64, observed between 2011 and 2019 (n = 26,776). Adjusting for income poverty, net worth poverty, relative to no poverty, was associated with a one-quarter to one-third increase in the likelihood of reporting poor self-rated health, psychological distress, and work limitations. Simultaneously experiencing both NWP and IP was associated with the largest deficits. Both asset-driven (low asset) and debt-driven (high debt) NWP reduced health, but asset-driven NWP had stronger associations (e.g., a 5-percentage point increase of being in poor health, twice that of debt-driven). White, relative to Black, adults exhibited statistically larger associations for psychological distress (4.3 vs 1.1 percentage points) and work limitations (3.7 vs. 1.5 percentage points). White and Black adults who were jointly net worth and income poor exhibited the most disadvantage. Findings underscore how wealth is a critical component of financial deprivation and that wealth deprivation, particularly the lack of assets, merits attention in socioeconomic studies of health inequalities. • Net worth poverty-wealth less than 1/4 of poverty line-negatively predicts health. • Net worth poverty related to poor health, psychological distress, and work limits. • Being both net worth and income poor put Black and White adults at the most risk. • Lack of assets may be more consequential for poor health than high debt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. The health impacts of eviction: Evidence from the national longitudinal study of adolescent to adult health.
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Hoke, Morgan K. and Boen, Courtney E.
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REGRESSION analysis , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MENTAL depression , *HOMELESS persons , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *ADULTS - Abstract
Eviction represents an urgent social and economic issue in the United States, with nearly two million evictions occurring annually in the U.S. Still, the population health impacts of evictions, as well as the pathways linking eviction to health, are not well documented or understood, particularly among young adults. Using nationally-representative, longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (1994–2008) (n = 9029), the present study uses a combination of analytic methods—including prospective lagged dependent variable regression models, inverse probabilities of treatment weighting, longitudinal first difference models, causal mediation techniques—to comprehensively assess whether and how evictions relate to depressive risk and self-rated health across early adulthood, paying particular attention to the stress-related pathways linking eviction and health. Results provide robust evidence of positive longitudinal associations between eviction and depressive risk, in particular. In the prospective regression models, young adults who experienced recent eviction had more depressive symptoms and worse self-rated health than those who were not evicted, net a host of background characteristics. Using treatment weighting techniques, results showed that young adults who experienced eviction had more depressive symptoms than those who were not evicted (5.921 vs. 4.998 depressive symptoms, p = 0.003). Perceived social stress mediated nearly 18 percent of the associations between eviction and the depressive symptoms (p < 0.001). In the first difference models, young people who experienced eviction between survey waves experienced greater increases in depressive symptoms over time compared to those who were not evicted, net of changes in other indicators of socioeconomic status and residential instability. Taken together, our results suggest that the recent surges in evictions in the U.S. serve as a potent threat to population health during the emerging adult period, with especially devastating consequences for low-income individuals and communities of color. • Eviction represents a major public health issue • Eviction is associated with increased depressive risk over time in young adults • Eviction represents a unique stressor even when confounding factors are considered • Stress mediates the association between eviction and depressive symptoms [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Racial Disparities in Mortality During the 1918 Influenza Pandemic in United States Cities.
- Author
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Eiermann, Martin, Wrigley-Field, Elizabeth, Feigenbaum, James J., Helgertz, Jonas, Hernandez, Elaine, and Boen, Courtney E.
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- 2022
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10. Young Adult Risk Factors for Cancer: Obesity, Inflammation, and Sociobehavioral Mechanisms.
- Author
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Yang, Yang Claire, Johnson, Moira P., Schorpp, Kristen M., Boen, Courtney E., and Harris, Kathleen Mullan
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CANCER risk factors , *HEALTH of young adults , *OBESITY , *INFLAMMATION , *HEALTH behavior - Abstract
Introduction: The paper assesses social disparities in the burdens of metabolic and inflammatory risks for cancer in the U.S. young adult population and examines psychosocial and behavioral mechanisms in such disparities.Methods: Using data of 7,889 individuals aged 12-32 years from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health from 1994 to 2009, generalized linear models were used to assess the sex, race/ethnicity, and SES differences in the risks of obesity and inflammation, measured by C-reactive protein. Further tests examined the extent to which social isolation, smoking, physical inactivity, alcohol abuse, and illicit drug use explain social differentials in each biomarker outcome.Results: Women, blacks, Hispanics, and socioeconomically disadvantaged groups had higher risks of obesity and elevated C-reactive protein, with the SES gradients being more pronounced in female participants. Health-related behaviors showed large variation across sex, race, and SES strata. After adjusting for these behavioral variables, sex, and race disparities in obesity and excess inflammation in blacks diminished, whereas the adolescent SES disparity in obesity remained. The associations of adolescent and young adult SES disadvantage and inflammation were also explained by behavioral mechanisms. Behavioral factors associated with higher risks of obesity and inflammation differed, with the exception of fast food consumption, a risk factor for both.Conclusions: This study provides new knowledge of social distribution of early life exposures to physiologic precedents to cancer development later in life with implications for prevention and early intervention of modifiable risky behaviors in adolescents and young adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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