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1.
Health Info Libr J ; 40(1): 114-119, 2023 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36625709

RESUMO

The research goals were to obtain an understanding of who the users of e-books in the NHS are, what they are using e-books for, and when and how they use them. This article presents the methodology used and the findings from the research. It also explores the outputs and next steps from the research, both for the individual countries and collectively. The Five Nations group, (library leads in England, Northern Ireland, Ireland, Scotland and Wales) commissioned research into healthcare staff use and non-use of e-books to understand the behaviours, needs and expectations of healthcare staff and to identify shared challenges around e-books to inform policy and practice.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Políticas , Humanos , Inglaterra , Escócia , Livros , Reino Unido
2.
Soc Sci Med ; 149: 46-65, 2016 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26706402

RESUMO

Researchers often rely on respondents' self-rated health (SRH) to measure social disparities in health, but recent studies suggest that systematically different reporting styles across groups can yield misleading conclusions about disparities in SRH. In this study, we test whether this finding extends to ethnic differences in self-assessments of health in particular domains. We document differences between US-born whites and four Latino subgroups in respondents' assessments of health in six health domains using data from the second wave of the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey (N = 1468). We use both conventional methods and an approach that uses vignettes to adjust for differential reporting styles. Our results suggest that despite consistent evidence from the literature that Latinos tend to rate their overall health more poorly than whites, and that Latino immigrants report worse SRH than US-born Latinos, this pattern is not true of self-reports in individual health domains. We find that at the bivariate level, US-born whites (and often US-born Mexicans) have significantly more pessimistic reporting styles than Latino immigrants. After adding controls, we find evidence of significantly different reporting styles for only one domain: US-born Mexicans and whites consistently interpret head pain more severely than the other Latino subgroups. Finally, we find that both before and after adjusting for differences in rating styles across groups, non-Mexican Latino immigrants report better social and physical functioning and less pain than other groups. Our findings underscore the advantages of domain-specific ratings when evaluating ethnic differences in self-assessments of health. We encourage researchers studying social disparities in health to consider respondents' self-assessments in a variety of domains, and to also investigate (when possible) potential biases in their findings due to different reporting styles. The anchoring vignettes approach we use is one potential method for overcoming biases due to different rating styles across groups.


Assuntos
Emigrantes e Imigrantes/psicologia , Disparidades nos Níveis de Saúde , Inquéritos Epidemiológicos/métodos , Hispânico ou Latino/psicologia , Americanos Mexicanos/psicologia , População Branca/psicologia , Adulto , Emigrantes e Imigrantes/estatística & dados numéricos , Feminino , Hispânico ou Latino/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Los Angeles , Masculino , Americanos Mexicanos/estatística & dados numéricos , México/etnologia , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , População Branca/estatística & dados numéricos
3.
Am J Epidemiol ; 180(2): 153-9, 2014 Jul 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24944288

RESUMO

Many studies rely on self-reports to capture population trends and trajectories in weight gain over adulthood, but the validity of self-reports is often considered a limitation. The purpose of this work was to examine long-term trajectories of self-reporting bias in a national sample of American youth. With 3 waves of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (1996-2008), we used growth curve models to examine self-reporting bias in trajectories of weight gain across adolescence and early adulthood (ages 13-32 years). We investigated whether self-reporting bias is constant over time, or whether adolescents become more accurate in reporting their weight as they move into young adulthood, and we examined differences in self-reporting bias by sex, race/ethnicity, and attained education. Adolescent girls underreported their weight by 0.86 kg on average, and this rate of underreporting increased over early adulthood. In contrast, we found no evidence that boys underreported their weight either in adolescence or over the early adult years. For young men, self-reports of weight were unbiased estimates of measured weight among all racial/ethnic and educational subpopulations over adolescence and early adulthood.


Assuntos
Peso Corporal , Autorrelato , Adolescente , Adulto , Viés , Peso Corporal/etnologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health , Grupos Raciais , Fatores Sexuais , Estados Unidos , Adulto Jovem
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