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Pathways to Health, 1st ed. 2019 SpringerBriefs in Population Studies Series

Langue : Anglais

Auteurs :

Couverture de l’ouvrage Pathways to Health

This book presents a rigorous enquiry into life course processes that are thought to influence health, integrating the latest methodologies for the study of pathways that link socio-demographic circumstances to health with an emphasis on the mediating factors that lie on these pathways. Following an introductory chapter on the application of formal mediation methods within the life course framework, the book offers insights on the pathways that link early life socio-economic circumstances to physical activity in later life, the role of physical activity as a moderator and/or mediator of the association between fertility history and later life health and the evolution of self-rated health over the life course in two generations born 12 years apart in 20th century Britain. Pathways to Health presents a dynamic view on how to investigate specific hypotheses within the life course framework and enhances the ability of the social science community to investigate specific mechanisms related to public health interventions.

Mediation Analysis for Life Course Studies: Bianca De Stavola & Rhian Daniel.- Lifelong socio-economic position and later life health related behaviour: A formal mediation approach: George B. Ploubidis, Lenka Benova, Bianca DeStavola & Emily Grundy.- Physical activity: a moderator or mediator in the association between fertility history and later life health?: Sanna Read & Emily Grundy.- Self-rated health over the life course: Evidence from the 1958 and 1970 British birth cohorts:George B. Ploubidis & Benedetta Pongiglione.

George B. Ploubidis is Professor of Population Health and Statistics at University College London (UCL) and currently holds the posts of Director of Research and Chief Statistician at the UCL Centre for Longitudinal Studies. Prior to joining UCL he held posts at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the University of Cambridge. He is a multidisciplinary Quantitative Social Scientist with a primary interest in socio-economic and demographic determinants of population health and the mechanisms that link these over the life course.

 

Bianca DeStavola joined UCL GOS Institute of Child Health after 23 years at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine where she was Professor of Biostatistics in the Department of Medical Statistics and  co-Director of the Centre for Statistical Methodology. Bianca’s main research activities involve the understanding, development and implementation of statistical methods for long-term longitudinal studies, with specific applications to life-course epidemiology.  As these often involve causal enquiries, in particular related to understanding pathways towards disease development, mediation analysis is her main interest. 

 

Emily Grundy is Professor of Population Science and Director of the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) at the University of Essex. Previous appointments have been at the London School of Economics, University of Cambridge, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and King’s College, London. Emily is a demographer by training and most of her work has focussed on ageing. Her main research interests are families, households and kin and social networks in later life, especially in relationship to health, associations between family life courses and health and well-being at older ages, and trends and differentials in later life health, disability and mortality.

 

Rhian Daniel is a statistician with aparticular

Integrates causal mediation methods within the life course framework Establishes life course associations with later life health outcomes Uses biomarkers as health outcomes of socially driven life course processes

Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 97 p.

15.5x23.5 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).

63,29 €

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