16 research outputs found
Early life patterns of common infection: a latent class analysis
Early life infection has been implicated in the aetiology of many chronic diseases, most often through proxy measures. Data on ten infectious symptoms were collected by parental questionnaire when children were 6 months old as part of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, United Kingdom. A latent class analysis was used to identify patterns of infection and their relationship to five factors commonly used as proxies: sex, other children in the home, maternal smoking, breastfeeding and maternal education. A total of 10,032 singleton children were included in the analysis. Five classes were identified with differing infectious disease patterns and children were assigned to the class for which they had a highest probability of membership based on their infectious symptom profile: âgeneral infectionâ (n = 1,252, 12.5%), âgastrointestinalâ (n = 1,902, 19.0%), âmild respiratoryâ (n = 3,560, 35.5%), âcolds/ear acheâ (n = 462, 4.6%) and âhealthyâ (n = 2,856, 28.5%). Females had a reduced risk of being in all infectious classes, other children in the home were associated with an increased risk of being in the âgeneral infectionâ, âmild respiratoryâ or âcolds/ear acheâ class. Breastfeeding reduced the risk of being in the âgeneral infectionâ and âgastrointestinalâ classes whereas maternal smoking increased the risk of membership. Higher maternal education was associated with an increased risk of being in the âmild respiratoryâ group. Other children in the home had the greatest association with infectious class membership. Latent class analysis provided a flexible method of investigating the relationship between multiple symptoms and demographic and lifestyle factors
Assessing the Viability of the Independent Practice of Dental Hygiene â A Brief Communication
Enhanced Religiosity Following Illness? Assessing Evidence of Religious Consolation Among Black and White Americans
This study assesses variation among Black and White Americans in the impact of ill-health on public and subjective religiosity. It is the first longitudinal assessment of race-based variation in religious consolation. The under-explored consolation thesis anticipates ill-health influencing religiosity rather than the reverse, with religiosity functioning as a coping resource marshaled by the ill. Effects across races of physical ill-health indicators (chronic illnesses and impaired functioning) on religiosity outcomes are the main focus; but across-race variation in psychological distress-induced consolation is also assessed. Findings yield only limited evidence of consolation in each race, and restricted variation across races: Change in impaired functioning slightly enhances Whites\u27 subjective religiosity; but that effect does not significantly eclipse the impact among Blacks. There is no evidence of physical illness-induced consolation among Blacks; and the proposition that Blacks are more inclined toward consolation than Whites is affirmed only for psychological distress. There are no signs in either race that consolation is intensified by aging or higher religiosity, and no significant across-race differentials in effects of these illness-age and illness-religiosity interactions on subsequent religiosity. The multi-population model utilizes Americans\u27 Changing Lives data