80 research outputs found

    Demographic, Psychological, and School Environment Correlates of Bullying Victimization and School Hassles in Rural Youth

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    Little is known about bullying in rural areas. The participants in this study included 3,610 racially diverse youth (average age = 12.8) from 28 rural schools who completed the School Success Profile-Plus. Binary logistic regression models were created to predict bullying victimization in the past 12 months, and ordered logistic regression was used to predict school hassles in the past 12 months. Overall, 22.71% of the sample experienced bullying victimization and school victimization rates ranged from 11% to 38%. Risk factors for bullying victimization included younger students and students experiencing depression and anxiety. Being female, Hispanic/Latino or African American, was associated with lower bullying victimization. Thirty-nine percent of the sample reported a high level of school hassles. Younger students and students with higher levels of anxiety and depression were at increased risk for school hassles. Students from larger schools reported high levels of school hassles, while students from schools with more teachers with advanced degrees reported fewer school hassles

    Scaling Up a Multifaceted Violence Prevention Package: County-Level Impact of the North Carolina Youth Violence Prevention Center

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    OBJECTIVE: Multifaceted approaches to youth-violence prevention package evidence-based programs into initiatives that yield large-scale impact. This study assessed the impact of a package of evidence-based violence prevention programs, implemented as part of the North Carolina Youth Violence Prevention Center, on county-level violence indicators. METHOD: Using growth-curve modeling, the target county was compared to all other counties in North Carolina and a comparison county. RESULTS: Results reveal downward trends on several county-level indicators (i.e., undisciplined/delinquent complaints, total delinquent complaints, juvenile arrests–aggravated assaults, and short-term suspensions) throughout the intervention period. However, statistical tests were unable to confirm that intervention-period scores on youth-violence indicators were significantly different than expected scores given the relationship between pretest and intervention-period scores in other North Carolina counties. CONCLUSIONS: Although additional administrative data points are needed to support the hypotheses, this study provides preliminary evidence of the effectiveness of North Carolina Youth Violence Prevention Center interventions

    Coping With a Crisis: Financial Resources Available to Low- and Moderate-Income Households in Emergencies

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    Using data from tax records and a longitudinal survey, this brief investigates the choices low- and moderate-income households make about their tax withholding and their preferences for withholding. The relationship between withholding preferences and the use of the tax refund, measures of material hardship, and the use of alternative financial services is also explored. We find that almost half of all survey respondents preferred to overwithhold their income each year in order to get a larger tax refund. Yet despite preferring to take home less income during the year, these households experienced higher levels of material hardship than those who preferred to break even in their withholding, and were more likely to use alternative financial services like payday lenders. Further, households that preferred to overwithhold were less likely to save their refund. We also find that respondents who preferred to break even on their withholding or underwithhold on their taxes still overwithheld a substantial amount of income, indicating that LMI households have difficulty withholding their preferred amounts. Implications of these findings for policy are discussed

    Racial Disparities in Student Debt: Evidence From the Refund to Savings Initiative

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    This brief provides evidence that low- and moderate-income (LMI) Black households accumulate significantly more debt in pursuit of a higher education than do LMI White students, even after using rigorous methods to account for race- and debt-related confounders. Using data from the Refund to Savings experiment, the authors find that LMI Black households accrued $7,721 more in student loan debt than their White counterparts did. This finding is crucial in light of the financial vulnerability of this population both before and after college. That vulnerability potentially contributes to diminished returns and exacerbates racial disparities in educational outcomes and wealth accumulation. The brief discusses policy remedies that can continue to enhance access to college for low-income minorities while ensuring equitable outcomes during and after college

    Modeling Ecological Risk, Health Promotion, and Prevention Program Effects for Rural Adolescents

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    Objective: Universal prevention programs such as Positive Action (PA) mitigate risk factors and enhance promotive factors, often leading to improved adolescent functioning and school climate. The current study used 5 waves of data to assess the impact of PA on adolescent mental health and perceptions of school climate 1 year after completion of the program in a sample of low-income, rural youth. Method: Following multiple imputation and propensity score analysis, we ran 4 (2-level) hierarchal linear models to examine program effects. Results: PA program participants reported significant increases in self-esteem and significant decreases in school hassles relative to youths who did not participate in PA. Participation in PA did not have a significant impact on internalizing symptoms or aggression. Risk factors across the adolescents’ ecology had a strong negative impact on the outcomes, and some promotive factors modestly bolstered adolescent functioning. Conclusions: Findings highlight the influence that risk factors—especially negative interpersonal conflicts—have on adolescent outcomes and indicate that, although PA can help improve adolescents’ perceptions of themselves and their school climate, the program might need to be tailored for use in low-income, rural areas

    Contributions of Therapist Characteristics and Stability to Intensive In-home Therapy Youth Outcomes

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    This study examines the influence of therapist and youth characteristics on post-discharge outcomes from intensive in-home therapy

    Grandi Byen-supporting child growth and development through integrated, responsive parenting, nutrition and hygiene: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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    BACKGROUND: Poor child growth and development outcomes stem from complex relationships encompassing biological, behavioral, social, and environmental conditions. However, there is a dearth of research on integrated approaches targeting these interwoven factors. The Grandi Byen study seeks to fill this research gap through a three-arm longitudinal randomized controlled trial which will evaluate the impact of an integrated nutrition, responsive parenting, and WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene) intervention on holistic child growth and development. METHODS: We will recruit 600 mother-infant dyads living in Cap-Haitien, Haiti and randomize them equally into one of the following groups: 1) standard well-baby care; 2) nutritional intervention (one egg per day for 6 months); and 3) multicomponent Grandi Byen intervention (responsive parenting, nutrition, WASH + one egg per day for 6 months). Primary outcomes include child growth as well as cognitive, language, motor, and social-emotional development. The study also assesses other indicators of child health (bone maturation, brain growth, diarrheal morbidity and allergies, dietary intake, nutrient biomarkers) along with responsive parenting as mediating factors influencing the primary outcomes. An economic evaluation will assess the feasibility of large-scale implementation of the interventions. DISCUSSION: This study builds on research highlighting the importance of responsive parenting interventions on overall child health, as well as evidence demonstrating that providing an egg daily to infants during the complementary feeding period can prevent stunted growth. The multicomponent Grandi Byen intervention may provide evidence of synergistic or mediating effects of an egg intervention with instruction on psychoeducational parenting and WASH on child growth and development. Grandi Byen presents key innovations with implications for the well-being of children living in poverty globally. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT04785352 . Registered March 5, 2021 at https://clinicaltrials.gov/

    The Effect of Male Incarceration on Rape Myth Acceptance: Application of Propensity Score Matching Technique

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    The aim is to assess the effect of imprisonment on rape myth acceptance. The research used a sample of male prisoners incarcerated for non-sexual crimes (n = 98) and a sample of males drawn from the general population (n = 160). Simple linear regression did not indicate a significant effect of incarceration on rape myth acceptance. After controlling for background covariates using propensity score matching, analysis revealed a positive significant effect of incarceration on rape myth acceptance. Although further research is required, results indicate that being subject to incarceration has a significant positive effect on stereotypical thinking about rape

    Shanghai: Pioneer of fertility decline in People's Republic of China--trends and determinants of fertility transition, 1950-1984.

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    This dissertation is an attempt to use all possible sources of data to search for the determinants of fertility transition in Shanghai Municipality, People's Republic of China, during the past three decades. The basic questions to be addressed in the study are: Why did the fertility decline rapidly within a short period in Shanghai? Why did fertility transition start earlier in Shanghai than elsewhere in the country? What was the role of government's family planning program in the decline? Four major approaches are applied in the study: (1) qualitative analysis on the main factors affecting the early onset of fertility transition, (2) time series analysis to examine the temporal changes in fertility and age of marriage at the aggregated level, (3) disaggregated analysis on the determinants of children ever born, for a same age group of women at different time points, and (4) Logit regression analysis on the determinants of the probability of having a high-parity child. This study finds that an adequate explanation of the rapidity, timing, and extent of Shanghai's fertility transition involves four major interwoven components. First, Shanghai's high socioeconomic development level, pervasive and dramatic social changes, and its urban characteristics played a decisive role in inducing an earlier and faster fertility decline in the city than that in the remaining parts of the country. Second, among various behavioral as well as ideological changes regarding to human reproduction, a new norm of fertility regulation was the most important factor that created a constantly increasing demand for birth control, and accelerated the pace of Shanghai's fertility decline. Third, a well organized and successful family planning program resulted in a pervasive increase in awareness of and accessibility to effective and acceptable means of fertility regulation, and remarkably speeded up the spread of innovation such as a new idea or a new technological achievement from one social group to another. Fourth, a centralized political system and a highly controlled social life through a bureaucratic organization exceptionally facilitated the government to implement its population control policy.Ph.D.Asian historyDemographyIndividual and family studiesPublic administrationSocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/128517/2/9023557.pd
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