74 results on '"Verna, M"'
Search Results
2. Drinking from a Full Cup: Race, Racism, and Discrimination in Contemporary Social Psychological Research.
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Fields, Corey D., Keith, Verna M., and Tinkler, Justine
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PSYCHIATRY ,RACISM ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,SERIAL publications ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RACE ,GROUP identity ,SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
The article discusses the editors' excitement and curiosity about research in sociological social psychology related to race, racism, and discrimination. It mentions a diverse range of research in the field, addressing racial identity formation, experiences of discrimination, and the impact of racial bias on decision-making.
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- 2023
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3. Psychological Distress among Black Immigrants by Region of Birth.
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Marquez-Velarde, Guadalupe, Miller, Gabe H., Ma, Guizhen, and Keith, Verna M.
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IMMIGRANTS ,BLACK people ,POPULATION geography ,INTERVIEWING ,MENTAL health ,HEALTH status indicators ,SURVEYS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
We assess the likelihood of moderate and severe psychological distress among Black immigrants. We test the region of context framework, which states that Black immigrants from majority-Black and racially mixed regions of origin have better health outcomes than Black immigrants from majority-white contexts. We utilize data from IPUMS Health Surveys, 2000–2018. We employed partial proportional odds models to assess the likelihood of moderate and severe psychological distress among Black immigrants and U.S.-born Black Americans. All immigrant groups, except for Black Europeans, are significantly less likely to be in moderate and severe distress vis-à-vis U.S.-born Black Americans (p < 0.01). Black Africans are about 54–58% less likely to be in severe distressed compared to U.S.-born Black Americans. Black immigrants from racially mixed and majority-Black contexts (Mexico, Central America, Caribbean, South America, and Africa) are significantly less likely to be afflicted with moderate and severe distress than U.S.-born Black Americans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Melatonin: highlighting its use as a potential treatment for SARS-CoV-2 infection.
- Author
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Reiter, Russel J., Sharma, Ramaswamy, Simko, Fedor, Dominguez-Rodriguez, Alberto, Tesarik, Jan, Neel, Richard L., Slominski, Andrzej T., Kleszczynski, Konrad, Martin-Gimenez, Verna M., Manucha, Walter, and Cardinali, Daniel P.
- Abstract
Numerous pharmaceutical drugs have been repurposed for use as treatments for COVID-19 disease. These drugs have not consistently demonstrated high efficacy in preventing or treating this serious condition and all have side effects to differing degrees. We encourage the continued consideration of the use of the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agent, melatonin, as a countermeasure to a SARS-CoV-2 infection. More than 140 scientific publications have identified melatonin as a likely useful agent to treat this disease. Moreover, the publications cited provide the rationale for the use of melatonin as a prophylactic agent against this condition. Melatonin has pan-antiviral effects and it diminishes the severity of viral infections and reduces the death of animals infected with numerous different viruses, including three different coronaviruses. Network analyses, which compared drugs used to treat SARS-CoV-2 in humans, also predicted that melatonin would be the most effective agent for preventing/treating COVID-19. Finally, when seriously infected COVID-19 patients were treated with melatonin, either alone or in combination with other medications, these treatments reduced the severity of infection, lowered the death rate, and shortened the duration of hospitalization. Melatonin’s ability to arrest SARS-CoV-2 infections may reduce health care exhaustion by limiting the need for hospitalization. Importantly, melatonin has a high safety profile over a wide range of doses and lacks significant toxicity. Some molecular processes by which melatonin resists a SARS-CoV-2 infection are summarized. The authors believe that all available, potentially beneficial drugs, including melatonin, that lack toxicity should be used in pandemics such as that caused by SARS-CoV-2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Low-Concentration Norepinephrine Infusion for Major Surgery: A Safety and Feasibility Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Aykanat, Verna M., Myles, Paul S., Weinberg, Laurence, Burrell, Aidan, and Bellomo, Rinaldo
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- 2022
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6. DNA damage-induced phosphorylation of CtIP at a conserved ATM/ATR site T855 promotes lymphomagenesis in mice.
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Xiaobin S. Wang, Menolfi, Demis, Foon Wu-Baer, Fangazio, Marco, Meyer, Stefanie N., Zhengping Shao, Yunyue Wang, Yimeng Zhu, Lee, Brian J., Estes, Verna M., Cupo, Olivia M., Gautier, Jean, Pasqualucci, Laura, Dalla-Favera, Riccardo, Baer, Richard, and Shan Zha
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PHOSPHORYLATION ,AUTOMATED teller machines ,CHROMOSOMAL translocation ,DNA ,MICE - Abstract
CtIP is a DNA end resection factor widely implicated in alternative end-joining (A-EJ)-mediated translocations in cell-based reporter systems. To address the physiological role of CtIP, an essential gene, in translocation-mediated lymphomagenesis, we introduced the T855A mutation at murine CtIP to nonhomologous end-joining and Tp53 double-deficient mice that routinely succumbed to lymphomas carrying A-EJ-mediated IgH-Myc translocations. T855 of CtIP is phosphorylated by ATM or ATR kinases upon DNA damage to promote end resection. Here, we reported that the T855A mutation of CtIP compromised the neonatal development of Xrcc4
-/- Tp53-/- mice and the IgH-Myc translocation-driven lymphomagenesis in DNA-PKcs-/- Tp53-/- mice. Mechanistically, the T855A mutation limits DNA end resection length without affecting hairpin opening, translocation frequency, or fork stability. Meanwhile, after radiation, CtIP-T855A mutant cells showed a consistent decreased Chk1 phosphorylation and defects in the G2/M cell cycle checkpoint. Consistent with the role of T855A mutation in lymphomagenesis beyond translocation, the CtIP-T855A mutation also delays splenomegaly in λ-Myc mice. Collectively, our study revealed a role of CtIP-T855 phosphorylation in lymphomagenesis beyond A-EJ-mediated chromosomal translocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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7. Discrimination and Black Social Media Use: Sites of Oppression and Expression.
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Miller, Gabe H., Marquez-Velarde, Guadalupe, Williams, Apryl A., and Keith, Verna M.
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- 2021
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8. Do White People See Variation in Black Skin Tones? Reexamining a Purported Outgroup Homogeneity Effect.
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Hannon, Lance, Keith, Verna M., DeFina, Robert, and Campbell, Mary E.
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WHITE people ,SOCIAL cognitive theory ,HOMOGENEITY ,OUTGROUPS (Social groups) ,RACIAL classification - Abstract
Previous research has reported that white survey interviewers remember black respondents' skin tones in a much narrower range than recollections by black interviewers. This finding has been used to suggest that, in line with the one-drop rule, whites do not perceive meaningful differences between light- and dark-skinned black people. The authors reanalyze evidence thought to demonstrate relative homogeneity in white interviewers' evaluation of black skin tones. In contrast to previous studies, this examination of several data sources reveals significant heterogeneity in the ratings assigned by white interviewers when taking into account the ordinal nature of the skin tone measures. The results are consistent with theories of social cognition that emphasize that beyond formal racial classification schemes, skin tone is used to implicitly categorize others along a continuum of "blackness." The findings also align with research suggesting that rather than nullifying within-race skin tone, increases in white racism intensify white colorism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Lyme Disease in the Era of COVID-19: A Delayed Diagnosis and Risk for Complications.
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Novak, Cheryl B., Scheeler, Verna M., and Aucott, John N.
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COVID-19 testing ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL logic ,LYME disease ,COVID-19 ,DELAYED diagnosis - Abstract
We describe a patient with fever and myalgia who did not have COVID-19 but instead had Lyme disease. We propose that the co-occurrence of COVID-19 and Lyme disease during the spring of 2020 resulted in a delayed diagnosis of Lyme disease due to COVID-19 pandemic-related changes in healthcare workflow and diagnostic reasoning. This delayed diagnosis of Lyme disease in the patient we describe resulted in disseminated infection and sixth nerve palsy. We present the use of telemedicine to aid in the diagnosis of Lyme disease and to provide prompt access to diagnosis and care during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Caste Differences in Hypertension Among Women in India: Diminishing Health Returns to Socioeconomic Status for Lower Caste Groups.
- Author
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Uddin, Jalal, Acharya, Sanjeev, Valles, Jessica, Baker, Elizabeth H., and Keith, Verna M.
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- 2020
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11. The color of death: race, observed skin tone, and all-cause mortality in the United States.
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Stewart, Quincy Thomas, Cobb, Ryon J., and Keith, Verna M.
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MORTALITY ,BLACK people ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,RACE ,RESEARCH funding ,SKIN ,SURVEYS ,WHITE people ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: This paper examines how mortality covaries with observed skin tone among blacks and in relation to whites. Additionally, the study analyzes the extent to which social factors such as socioeconomic status affect this relationship. Design: This study uses data from the 1982 General Social Survey (N = 1,689) data linked to the National Death Index until 2008. We use this data to examine the links between race, observed skin tone among blacks, and all-cause mortality. Piecewise exponential hazard modeling was used to estimate disparities in skin tone mortality among blacks, and relative to whites. The multivariate models control for age, education, gender, region, metropolitan statistical area, marital status, labor force status, and household income. Results: Observed skin tone is a significant determinant of mortality among blacks and in relation to whites. Light skinned blacks had the lowest mortality hazards among blacks, while respondents with medium and dark brown skin experienced significantly higher mortality. The observed skin tone mortality disparities covaried with education; there are significant mortality disparities across observed skin tone groups among black respondents with high school or more education, and nonsignificant disparities among those with less education. Conclusion: It is crucial to identify the social processes driving racial disparities in health and mortality. The findings reveal that the nuanced social experiences of blacks with different observed skin tones markedly change the experience of racial inequality. Research on the nuanced social processes and biological mechanisms that connect differences in observed skin tone to mortality outcomes promises to better illuminate the experience of racial inequality and policy mechanisms we can use to undermine it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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12. Clinical PARP inhibitors do not abrogate PARP1 exchange at DNA damage sites in vivo.
- Author
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Shao, Zhengping, Lee, Brian J, Rouleau-Turcotte, Élise, Langelier, Marie-France, Lin, Xiaohui, Estes, Verna M, Pascal, John M, and Zha, Shan
- Published
- 2020
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13. Subtypes of Girls Who Engage in Serious Delinquency and Their Young Adult Outcomes.
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Smith, Danielle M., Blake, Jamilia J., Luo, Wen, Keith, Verna M., and Gilreath, Tameka
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JUVENILE delinquency & psychology ,BLACK people ,MENTAL depression ,HISPANIC Americans ,JUVENILE delinquency ,MENTAL health ,SELF-evaluation ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TEENAGERS' conduct of life ,PSYCHOLOGY of crime victims ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ADOLESCENCE ,ADULTS - Abstract
Girls are increasingly becoming involved with the juvenile justice system; however, what brings girls to engage in delinquency or what obstacles these girls face later in life resulting from adolescent criminal behavior is understudied. In the present study, we used latent class analysis to identify subtypes of risks among adolescent girls (N = 1,174) who have engaged in delinquent behaviors and mixture modeling to determine what distal psychological, social, educational, and economic outcomes in young adulthood are associated with each subtype. Four adolescent subtypes were identified, which were distinguished primarily based on the severity of their self-reported victimization experiences and mental health concerns. Classes with higher levels of victimization experiences tended to report more engagement with delinquent behavior in adolescence and had a larger proportion of Black and Hispanic girls than lower-victimization classes. Identified classes differed from each other on distal (i.e., young adulthood) measures of economic instability, educational attainment, drug use, depression, and adult arrests. Generally, latent classes which were characterized by higher rates of victimization and mental health concerns and lower educational performance in adolescence fared worse in young adulthood. Implications for those who care for girls who engage in delinquency, including suggestions for using trauma and culture informed screening, prevention, and intervention services, and directions for future research are discussed. Additional online materials for this article are available on PWQ's website at http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/suppl/0361684320918243. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. Is a Picture Worth A Thousand Words? An Experiment Comparing Observer-Based Skin Tone Measures.
- Author
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Campbell, Mary E., Keith, Verna M., Gonlin, Vanessa, and Carter-Sowell, Adrienne R.
- Abstract
Several different measures of skin color are popular in social science surveys, yet we have little evidence to suggest which method is the most valid or reliable when we design new studies. In this experiment, we compare three different ways of asking raters to evaluate skin tone, testing whether common methods designed to reduce variation across raters from different social groups are effective. We compare two popular scales: a simple text-based 5-point skin tone scale (which asks raters to classify pictures on a scale from very light to very dark) and a newer 10-point palette-based skin tone scale (which asks raters to choose a number from 1 to 10, with pictures associated with each number). We also ask raters to use a more complex two-axis color grid that we created, in order to test whether addressing common criticisms of the palette-based scales improves rating reliability. Experiment participants rated a randomly selected subset of pictures with a wide range of skin tones. We find that demographic characteristics of the raters such as gender, race, their amount of contact with diverse racial groups, and immigration status affect skin tone ratings that observers assign, no matter what type of measure is used, and the three measures have reliability ratings that are statistically similar. We discuss the implications of the differences between the measures for designing social science surveys and interview studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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15. Media Consumption and Racial Residential Preferences.
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Korver‐Glenn, Elizabeth, Emmanuel, Sylvia, Campbell, Mary E., and Keith, Verna M.
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UNITED States presidential elections ,POLITICAL trust (in government) ,CLASS differences ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,UNITED States politics & government - Abstract
Objective: To what extent do mainstream media, social media, and ethnic media consumption, as dominant and counter‐dominant forms of public discourse, connect to where people prefer to live? We unpack whether media consumption influences such preferences in Texas, a racially segregated and increasingly racially diverse state. Methods: Using the Texas Diversity Survey (n = 1,322), we run a series of logit regression models, stratified by respondent race (Black, Latinx, Multiracial, and White), to measure the relationship between media consumption and racial residential preferences. Results: We find that racial residential preferences are shaped not only by expected attributes (e.g., age, education, racial composition of current neighborhood of residence) but also by whether mainstream media are consumed for Latinx respondents. Whites who consume ethnic media are significantly more likely to prefer living in Black and Latinx communities. Conclusion: These findings suggest that public discourse is connected to residential preference formation and a "sense of group position"—but how this happens depends on the media source as well as the group in question. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. DNA-PKcs has KU-dependent function in rRNA processing and haematopoiesis.
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Shao, Zhengping, Flynn, Ryan A., Crowe, Jennifer L., Zhu, Yimeng, Liang, Jialiang, Jiang, Wenxia, Aryan, Fardin, Aoude, Patrick, Bertozzi, Carolyn R., Estes, Verna M., Lee, Brian J., Bhagat, Govind, Zha, Shan, and Calo, Eliezer
- Abstract
The DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), which comprises the KU heterodimer and a catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs), is a classical non-homologous end-joining (cNHEJ) factor1. KU binds to DNA ends, initiates cNHEJ, and recruits and activates DNA-PKcs. KU also binds to RNA, but the relevance of this interaction in mammals is unclear. Here we use mouse models to show that DNA-PK has an unexpected role in the biogenesis of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and in haematopoiesis. The expression of kinase-dead DNA-PKcs abrogates cNHEJ2. However, most mice that both expressed kinase-dead DNA-PKcs and lacked the tumour suppressor TP53 developed myeloid disease, whereas all other previously characterized mice deficient in both cNHEJ and TP53 expression succumbed to pro-B cell lymphoma3. DNA-PK autophosphorylates DNA-PKcs, which is its best characterized substrate. Blocking the phosphorylation of DNA-PKcs at the T2609 cluster, but not the S2056 cluster, led to KU-dependent defects in 18S rRNA processing, compromised global protein synthesis in haematopoietic cells and caused bone marrow failure in mice. KU drives the assembly of DNA-PKcs on a wide range of cellular RNAs, including the U3 small nucleolar RNA, which is essential for processing of 18S rRNA4. U3 activates purified DNA-PK and triggers phosphorylation of DNA-PKcs at T2609. DNA-PK, but not other cNHEJ factors, resides in nucleoli in an rRNA-dependent manner and is co-purified with the small subunit processome. Together our data show that DNA-PK has RNA-dependent, cNHEJ-independent functions during ribosome biogenesis that require the kinase activity of DNA-PKcs and its phosphorylation at the T2609 cluster. The catalytic subunit of DNA-PK autophosphorylates and contributes to ribosome biogenesis and haematopoiesis by binding to the U3 small nucleolar RNA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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17. Breaking the Cycle of Child Maltreatment and Intimate Partner Violence: The Effects of Student Gender and Caring Relationships with Teachers.
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Vaughan-Jensen, Jessica, Smith, Danielle M., Blake, Jamilia J., Keith, Verna M., and Willson, Victor K.
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INTIMATE partner violence ,RISK of violence ,CHILD abuse ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RISK assessment ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,TEACHER-student relationships ,VICTIMS ,DISEASE prevalence ,ADOLESCENCE ,ADULTS - Abstract
The prevalence of child maltreatment and its association with future violence makes identifying ways to intervene with victims and prevent subsequent violence increasingly important. Child maltreatment is any form of child abuse or child neglect resulting in actual or potential harm to a child's health, survival, development or dignity. Self-reported data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health were used to further understanding of a commonly described cycle of interpersonal violence where the experience of childhood maltreatment predicts victimization and perpetration of youth violence in adolescence and intimate partner violence in adulthood. Using a nationally representative sample, we examine how both gender and the experience of caring relationships with teachers could affect the cycle. Physical abuse was associated with youth violence victimization and perpetration, and neglect was associated with youth violence victimization. Youth violence victimization was related to IPV perpetration and victimization. For males, youth violence perpetration was associated with only IPV victimization, while for females, youth violence perpetration was associated with IPV perpetration and victimization. For males with low perceptions of having a caring teacher, youth violence victimization and perpetration were strongly correlated. Implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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18. Prevalence and correlates of everyday discrimination among black Caribbeans in the United States: the impact of nativity and country of origin.
- Author
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Taylor, Robert Joseph, Forsythe-Brown, Ivy, Mouzon, Dawne M., Keith, Verna M., Chae, David H., and Chatters, Linda M.
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RACISM ,BLACK people ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants ,INTERVIEWING ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DISEASE prevalence - Abstract
Objectives: Black Caribbeans in the United States have been the victims of major discrimination (e.g. unfairly fired, denied a promotion, denied housing). What is not known is the degree to which they also experience more routine forms of everyday discrimination such as receiving poor restaurant service, being perceived as dishonest, and being followed in stores. This paper investigates the distribution and correlates of everyday discrimination among a national sample of black Caribbeans in the U.S. Design: This analysis used the black Caribbean sub-sample (n = 1,621) of the National Survey of American Life. Demographic and immigration status correlates of ten items from the Everyday Discrimination Scale were investigated: being treated with less courtesy, treated with less respect, receiving poor restaurant service, being perceived as not smart, being perceived as dishonest, being perceived as not as good as others, and being feared, insulted, harassed, or followed in stores. Results: Roughly one out of ten black Caribbeans reported that, on a weekly basis, they were treated with less courtesy and other people acted as if they were better than them, were afraid of them, and as if they were not as smart. Everyday discrimination was more frequent for black Caribbeans who were male, never married, divorced/separated, earned higher incomes, and who were second or third generation immigrants. Black Caribbeans attributed the majority of the discrimination they experienced to their race. Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first study to provide an in-depth investigation of everyday discrimination among the black Caribbean population. It provides the frequency, types and correlates of everyday discrimination reported by black Caribbeans in the United States. Understanding the frequency and types of discrimination is important because of the documented negative impacts of everyday discrimination on physical and mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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19. Outflow dynamics in a French system of vertical wetlands operating with an extended feeding cycle.
- Author
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de Andrade Moraes, Mirene Augusta, García Zumalacarregui, Jorge A., Trein, Camila Maria, Ferreira, Vinícius Verna M., and von Sperling, Marcos
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HYDRAULIC conductivity ,SYSTEM dynamics ,WETLANDS ,MEASUREMENT of runoff ,DRAINAGE ,PERMEABILITY ,PERCOLATION - Abstract
The possibility of using the first stage of the French System (FS) of vertical wetlands composed of only two units in parallel requires hydraulic investigations to allow a better understanding of its operation under tropical climatic environments. This study evaluated the pattern of the outflow hydrograph along an extended cycle of operation (seven days of feeding) and the influence of the sludge deposit, rainfall occurrence and duration of pulse application on the outflow hydrograph in a modified full-scale FS in Brazil. The results indicated that, as the feeding cycle days increased, there was an increase in the time of filtration and the internal storage of the liquid volume, probably due to a reduction in the filter permeability. Greater hydraulic gradient favoured the infiltration velocity, decreased the amount of liquid stored within the system, and delayed the loss of permeability. The sludge layer contributed to a momentary liquid retention, and also allowed greater evapotranspiration, reducing the liquid volume to be treated. The sludge deposit seemed to hinder the liquid percolation, especially at the end of the cycle, modifying the hydraulic conductivity of the filter as a whole. Intense rainfall events demonstrated that precipitation could modify the flow dynamics within the system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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20. Correction to: Racial Context and Health Behaviors Among Black Immigrants.
- Author
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Miller, Gabe H., Marquez-Velarde, Guadalupe, Emoruwa, Oluwaseun T., Jones, Nicole E., Ma, Guizhen, Keith, Verna M., Elufisan, Gbenga I., and Hernandez, Stephanie M.
- Published
- 2023
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21. Kinase-dependent structural role of DNA-PKcs during immunoglobulin class switch recombination.
- Author
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Crowe, Jennifer L., Zhengping Shao, Xiaobin S. Wang, Pei-Chi Wei, Wenxia Jiang, Lee, Brian J., Estes, Verna M., Alt, Frederick W., and Shan Zha
- Subjects
PROTEIN kinases ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN G ,B cells ,KINASE structure ,DNA repair - Abstract
The catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) is a classical nonhomologous end-joining (cNHEJ) factor. Loss of DNA-PKcs diminished mature B cell class switch recombination (CSR) to other isotypes, but not IgG1. Here, we show that expression of the kinase-dead DNA-PKcs (DNA-PKcs
KD/KD ) severely compromises CSR to IgG1. High-throughput sequencing analyses of CSR junctions reveal frequent accumulation of nonproductive interchromosomal translocations, inversions, and extensive end resection in DNA-PKcsKD/KD , but not DNA-PKcs-/- , B cells. Meanwhile, the residual joints from DNA-PKcsKD/KD cells and the efficient Sμ-Sγ1 junctions from DNA-PKcs-/- B cells both display similar preferences for small (2-6 nt) microhomologies (MH). In DNA-PKcs-/- cells, Sμ-Sγ1 joints are more resistant to inversions and extensive resection than Sμ-Se and Sμ-Sμ joints, providing a mechanism for the isotype-specific CSR defects. Together, our findings identify a kinase-dependent role of DNA-PKcs in suppressing MH-mediated end joining and a structural role of DNA-PKcs protein in the orientation of CSR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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22. Microaggressions, Discrimination, and Phenotype among African Americans: A Latent Class Analysis of the Impact of Skin Tone and BMI.
- Author
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Keith, Verna M., Nguyen, Ann W., Taylor, Robert Joseph, Mouzon, Dawne M., and Chatters, Linda M.
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CRIMES against African Americans ,RACE discrimination ,MICROAGGRESSIONS ,PHENOTYPES ,HUMAN skin color ,BODY mass index - Abstract
Data from the 2001-2003 National Survey of American Life are used to investigate the effects of phenotype on everyday experiences with discrimination among African Americans ( N = 3343). Latent class analysis is used to identify four classes of discriminatory treatment: (1) low levels of discrimination, (2) disrespect and condescension, (3) character-based discrimination, and (4) high levels of discrimination. We then employ latent class multinomial logistic regression to evaluate the association between skin tone and body weight and these four classes of discrimination. Designating the low-level discrimination class as the reference group, findings revealed that respondents with darker skin were more likely to be classified into the disrespect/condescension and the high-level microaggression types. BMI was unrelated to the discrimination type, although there was a significant interaction effect between gender and BMI. BMI was strongly and positively associated with membership in the disrespect and condescension type among men but not among women. These findings indicate that skin tone and body weight are two phenotypic characteristics that influence the type and frequency of discrimination experienced by African Americans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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23. Discrimination and psychiatric disorders among older African Americans.
- Author
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Mouzon, Dawne M., Taylor, Robert Joseph, Keith, Verna M., Nicklett, Emily J., and Chatters, Linda M.
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MENTAL health of African Americans ,ANXIETY in old age ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,DISTRESS (Psychology) in old age - Abstract
Objectives: This study examined the impact of everyday discrimination (both racial and non-racial) on the mental health of older African Americans.Methods: This analysis is based on the older African American subsample of the National Survey of American Life (NSAL) (n = 773). We examined the associations between everyday discrimination and both general distress and psychiatric disorders as measured by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). Six dependent variables were examined: lifetime mood disorders, lifetime anxiety disorders, any lifetime disorder, number of lifetime disorders, depressive symptoms as measured by the 12-item Center for Epidemiological Scale of Depression (CES-D), and serious psychological distress as measured by the Kessler 6 (K6).Results: Overall, racial and non-racial everyday discrimination were consistently associated with worse mental health for older African Americans. Older African Americans who experienced higher levels of overall everyday discrimination had higher odds of any psychiatric disorder, any lifetime mood disorder, any lifetime anxiety disorder, and more lifetime DSM-IV disorders, in addition to elevated levels of depressive symptoms and serious psychological distress. These findings were similar for both racial discrimination and non-racial discrimination.Conclusions: This study documents the harmful association of not only racial discrimination, but also non-racial (and overall) discrimination with the mental health of older African Americans. Specifically, discrimination is negatively associated with mood and anxiety disorders as well as depressive symptoms and psychological distress. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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24. Role of playback videolaryngoscope footage in improved patient care.
- Author
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Aykanat, Verna M. and Graham, Jon M.
- Subjects
VIDEO recording ,INTUBATION ,EXTUBATION ,ENDOSCOPES ,LARYNGOSCOPY ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,TRACHEA intubation - Abstract
Despite the frequency of videolaryngoscope use, to the authors' knowledge, there are no publications exploring the role of playback video recording in real time to improve patient care. We present a patient with a difficult airway complicated by trauma during GlideScopeVR (Verathon Inc., Bothell, WA, USA) intubation. The injury was not recognised by any of the anaesthetic staff observing the intubation, and was only identified when playback video footage was viewed. This provided the opportunity for early ear, nose and throat surgical review prior to extubation. Airway trauma can be missed by the anaesthetist. Reviewing video playback footage at an appropriate time during the case may enable more timely recognition of airway injuries and, ultimately, improved patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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25. Histories of Colorism and Implications for Education.
- Author
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Keith, Verna M. and Monroe, Carla R.
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RACE discrimination in education ,COLORISM ,PREJUDICES ,PERSONAL beauty & race ,CIVIL rights movements - Abstract
In this article, we consider how colorist ideologies and practices unsettle arguments that celebrate racial gains in education, particularly as related to divides that have narrowed since the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Although outcomes based on race may document some general paths of improvement, progress and success can be appreciably uneven across people who are the same race. Even though skin tone is a linchpin of intraracial disparities, connections between colorism and educational outcomes are underappreciated. A brief consideration of how color-based advantages and disadvantages may affect African-, Latino/a-, and Asian-descended groups is provided to heighten educators' awareness of the problem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
26. Racial Identity and Well-Being among African Americans.
- Author
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Hughes, Michael, Kiecolt, K. Jill, Keith, Verna M., and Demo, David H.
- Subjects
RACE identity ,SELF-esteem ,AFRICAN Americans ,GROUP identity ,SOCIAL surveys ,RACISM - Abstract
How racial identity influences self-esteem and psychological well-being among African Americans remains unresolved due to unexplained inconsistencies in theoretical predictions and empirical findings. Using data from the National Survey of American Life (N = 3,570), we tested hypotheses derived from social identity theory and the internalized racism perspective. Findings support social identity theory in showing that African Americans strongly identify with their group and view it very positively. In addition, those who identify more with their group and evaluate it more positively have greater self-esteem, greater mastery, and fewer depressive symptoms. However, findings also support the internalized racism perspective by showing that when group evaluation is relatively negative, racial identification is related to lower mastery and higher depressive symptoms. We conclude that both social identity theory and the internalized racism perspective are necessary for understanding how racial identity is related to self-attitudes and mental health among African Americans. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Dialectics and Social Impact of the American Eugenics Movement on African Americans.
- Author
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Okeagu, Jonas E., Ikegwu, Emmanuel, Moore, Brittany A., Okeagu, Ejinwaemeonu N., Brixton, Rashanda N., Okeagu, Chinwenwa U., Harris, Antwoin, Henkis, Gretta A., and Ghee, Verna M.
- Subjects
EUGENICS ,MISCEGENATION ,MULTIRACIAL people ,GENETICS ,STERILIZATION (Birth control) ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
Eugenics movements came into vogue in the early 20
th century. With a name coined in 1833 by British anthropologist Francis Galton, a cousin of Charles Darwin, who hoped to see arranged marriages improve mankind, the movement eventually led to racist laws such as ones prohibiting the mixing of races (or miscegenation). Progressive reformers had a strong faith in science as the panacea that would herald in a new era of rational control of both nature and human society (Vergano, 2003). Under these conditions, it was not surprising that the revelation of a new science of genetics gave birth to a new science of social engineering called eugenics. Genetics appeared to explain the underlying cause of human social problems such as pauperism, rebelliousness, anomalism, criminality and prostitution as the inheritance of defective genes (Hamilton, 2005). Eugenicists argued that society paid a high price by allowing the birth of defective individuals who would have to be cared for by the state. Sterilization of one defective adult could save future generations thousands of dollars (Freeden, 1979). Eugenics was seen as a way to solve all of these combined problems because it placed the cause on defective genes of individuals and ethnic groups, and not in the structure of society itself. Eugenics used the cover of science to blame victims for their own problems. During the 20th century, many countries enacted various eugenics policies and programs, including promoting differential birth rates, compulsory sterilization, restrictions in marriage, genetic screening, birth control, immigration control, segregation and genocide. Vasectomy and tubal ligation were favored tools and methods of sterilization in the hands of eugenicists, because most doctors probably felt that sterilization was a more humane way of dealing with people who could not help themselves. Sterilization did alter the physical and psychological contribution of the reproductive organs (Kennedy, 1942), but allowed the convicted criminal or mental patient to participate in society, rather than being institutionalized at public expenses. Sterilization was not viewed as a punishment because these doctors erroneously believed that the social failure of the "unfit" people was due to irreversibly degenerate germplasm (Brigham, 1939). Eugenics programs were inherently racist, elitist and sexist. The 20th century American proponents of eugenics had substantive ties to the architects of Hitler's racial hygiene and extermination machine. There were financial supports of genetics researches and travels by Nazi doctors from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Carnegie Institution of Washington and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a leading genetics research institute (Vergano, 2003). There were research collaborations and reports on the Nazi efforts in the respected American journals like the Journal of the American Medical Association. North Carolina eugenics movement dramatically targeted African Americans in the general population because welfare recipients who were African Americans grew from 31% in 1950 to 48% in 1961. It was seen as necessary to sterilize these recipients of welfare to decrease the growing financial burden on the state (North Carolina Eugenics, 2009). Social workers were mandated to recommend sterilization based on such reasons as epilepsy, sickness, feeblemindedness, even promiscuity and homosexuality. In North Carolina, more whites than African Americans were sterilized until the 1960s. During the 1960s when social workers had the authority to recommend sterilization, the number of African Americans who were sterilized, increased dramatically to approximately 99%. The Biannual Eugenics Report for 1961 to 1968 stated that 99% of the operations were performed on women and 64% of the women were African Americans (Railey and Begos, 2002). The Negro Project conspiracy of 1939 and the Tuskegee Syphilis experiment between 1932 and 1972 were all rooted in the American eugenics mentality. The Negro Project, initiated by Margaret Sanger, aimed to reduce and eliminate the population of African Americans through abortion. Margaret Sanger regarded African Americans as weeds and menace to civilization that needed to be exterminated. For fifty years, the U.S. Public Health Service conducted experiment involving 339 African American men in the late stages of syphilis, using them as laboratory guinea pigs. They were falsely told that they were being treated for bad blood. Their doctors had no intention of curing them of their syphilis at all. On May 16, 1997, former president William Jefferson Clinton apologized for the Tuskegee syphilis experiment to the eight remaining survivors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
28. Association of the phosphodiesterase 4D (PDE4D) gene and cardioembolic stroke in an Australian cohort.
- Author
-
Milton, Austin G., Aykanat, Verna M., Hamilton-Bruce, M. Anne, Nezic, Mark, Jannes, Jim, and Koblar, Simon A.
- Subjects
PHOSPHODIESTERASES ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,CORONARY heart disease risk factors ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,CASE-control method ,HYPERCHOLESTEREMIA ,GENETICS - Abstract
Background Large-scale epidemiological studies support an important role for susceptibility genes in the pathogenesis of ischemic stroke, with phosphodiesterase 4D identified as the first gene predisposing to ischemic stroke. Several single nucleotide polymorphisms within the phosphodiesterase 4D gene have been implicated in the pathogenesis of stroke. Aim Undertake a multivariate analysis of six single nucleotide polymorphisms within the phosphodiesterase 4D gene in a previously defined Australian stroke cohort, to determine whether these single nucleotide polymorphisms have an association with ischemic stroke. Methods This case-control study was performed using an existing genetic database of 180 ischemic stroke patients and 301 community controls, evaluated previously for cerebrovascular risk factors (hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, smoking and history of stroke in a first-degree relative). Based on previously reported associations with large vessel disease, ischemic stroke, cardioembolic stroke or a mixture of these, six single nucleotide polymorphisms in the phosphodiesterase 4D gene were selected for study, these being single nucleotide polymorphisms 13, 19, rs152312, 45, 83 and 87, based on previously utilized DeCODE nomenclature. Single nucleotide polymorphisms were genotyped using a sequence-specific polymerase chain reaction method and gel electrophoresis. Logistic regression was undertaken to determine the relevance of each polymorphism to stroke. Further analysis was undertaken to determine the risk of stroke following stratification for stroke sub-type and etiology. Results Significant odds ratios were found to be associated with cardioembolic strokes in two single nucleotide polymorphisms: rs152312 and SNP 45 ( P<0·05). Conclusions Our findings demonstrated an association between cardioembolic stroke and phosphodiesterase 4D single nucleotide polymorphisms rs152312 and 45. No significant association was found for the other four single nucleotide polymorphisms investigated within the phosphodiesterase 4D gene. We propose that the results from this Australian population support the concept that a large prospective international study is required to investigate the role of phosphodiesterase 4D in the cardiogenic cause of ischemic stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. African Americans and Physical Health.
- Author
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Christie-Mizell, C. André, Ida, Aya Kimura, and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
HEALTH of African Americans ,SELF-esteem ,HAPPINESS ,PSYCHOLOGY of African Americans ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of emotions ,SOCIAL psychology ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,RACE discrimination ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
This research adds to the literature seeking to clarify the social psychological mechanism through which self-esteem is related to physical health for African Americans. Specifically, this study investigates the relationships among self-esteem, happiness, and physical health limitations for a representative sample of African Americans. Utilizing the Broaden-and-Build Theory of Positive Emotions, these results indicate that the impact of self-esteem on physical health outcomes is mediated by happiness. Interestingly, the positive influence that happiness exerts on physical health is suppressed by age. This study suggests that positive emotions such as happiness are beneficial to outcomes such as physical health by transforming traits such as self-esteem into adaptive capability and personal resources that individuals can use to improve health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. CAN A HIGH SENSE OF CONTROL AND JOHN HENRYISM BE BAD FOR MENTAL HEALTH?
- Author
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Kiecolt, K. Jill, Hughes, Michael, and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,SOCIAL status ,DETERMINATION (Personality trait) ,RACIAL differences - Abstract
Social stratification profoundly affects mental health. Specifically, substantial empirical evidence finds that higher status promotes mental health via a higher sense of control and a propensity to cope actively with problems. An unresolved issue, though, is whether the effects of sense of control and active coping on mental health are uniformly beneficial across levels of socioeconomic status. Perceived control and John Henryism, an active coping style, may undermine mental health, especially for lower-status persons, who lack resources. Using data from the National Comorbidity Survey for African Americans, Hispanics, and whites, we find that both sense of control and John Henryism tend to be monotonically related to positive mental health regardless of socioeconomic status and race/ethnicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Surviving Katrina and its aftermath: evacuation and community mobilization by Vietnamese Americans and African Americans.
- Author
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Li, Wei, Airriess, Christopher, Chen, Angela Chia-Chen, Leong, Karen J., Keith, Verna M., and Adams, Karen L.
- Subjects
CULTURAL geography ,HURRICANE Katrina, 2005 ,DISASTER victims ,DISASTER relief - Abstract
The flooding of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina on 29 August 2005 uncovered critical issues in local, state, and national strategies for emergency preparedness and disaster relief. The Katrina disaster reveals the persistent racial inequality and economic disparities in American society. This paper examines the pre-Katrina socio-spatial configuration of the African-American and Vietnamese-American communities in an eastern New Orleans suburb. Using a combination of quantitative and qualitative methods to collect data and compare the two groups, our study reveals media are the first and foremost information sources for both groups. Many Katrina victims evacuated more than once, some not with their families during their first and subsequent relocations. However, the communities mobilized to provide intra- and inter-group self-help among families and relatives, friends and neighbors, while receiving assistance from community organizations, religious institutions, and the government. Compared to African Americans, there were higher percentages of Vietnamese Americans learning about Katrina's impending landfall from government sources, evacuating before Katrina's landfall, and being more satisfied with assistance provided by the government. Those who are lacking in English skills reported more difficulties compared to their co-ethnics. These findings lead to several policy recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Race, social relationships, and mental health.
- Author
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KIECOLT, K. JILL, HUGHES, MICHAEL, and KEITH, VERNA M.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,AFRICAN Americans ,RACE ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,HAPPINESS ,SOCIAL interaction ,PSYCHIATRY ,RACISM - Abstract
Researchers often assume that the extent, quality, and effectiveness of personal relationships explain why African Americans have relatively good mental health despite experiencing high levels of stress. This study tests this assumption using data from the 1990–1992 National Comorbidity Survey. Few racial differences emerge in patterns of social relationships, and the nature and quality of social relationships do not explain African Americans’ resiliency on mental health. Several aspects of social relationships benefit African Americans’ mental health more than Whites’, but these moderating effects are insubstantial. Hence, the data do not support the assumption. If social relationships help explain the lack of racial differences in mental health, their nature and effects must be more adequately conceptualized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Resilient History and the Rebuilding of a Community: The Vietnamese American Community in New Orleans East.
- Author
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Leong, Karen J., Airriess, Christopher A., Wei Li, Chia-Chen Chen, Angela, and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
VIETNAMESE Americans ,HURRICANE Katrina, 2005 ,COLLECTIVE memory ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
An essay is presented on the recovery of the Vietnamese American community in New Orleans, Louisiana following destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina. The authors suggest Vietnamese Americans have succeeded in recovering due to cultural memory. Many Vietnamese were relocated to New Orleans following the Vietnam War and became homeowners. A majority of Vietnamese American residents of New Orleans returned following Katrina and protested the creation of the Chef Menteur landfill near the Village de L'Est region of the city. The authors suggest that the success of Vietnamese Americans in New Orleans was used to unfairly judge the efforts of African Americans. They discuss the role of the Catholic church in rebuilding the Vietnamese community in New Orleans.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Economic Vulnerability, Discrimination, and Hurricane Katrina: Health Among Black Katrina Survivors in Eastern New Orleans.
- Author
-
Chia-Chen Chen, Angela, Keith, Verna M., Airriess, Chris, Wei Li, and Leong, Karen J.
- Abstract
This article discusses a study aimed to investigate the relationship among economic vulnerability, perceived discrimination, and health outcomes among African American Hurricane Katrina survivors in New Orleans, Louisiana. The researchers used the vulnerable-populations conceptual framework to achieve their goal. The findings suggested that a higher level of perceived racial discrimination during Katrina and financial strain post-Katrina were associated with more posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Cognitive Demands and Second-Language Learners: A Framework for Analyzing Mathematics Instructional Contexts.
- Author
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Campbell, Anne E., Adams, Verna M., and Davis, Gary E.
- Subjects
ENGLISH language education ,EDUCATIONAL psychology ,MATHEMATICS education ,LEARNING ,MATHEMATICS teachers ,STUDENTS - Abstract
The issues involved in teaching English language learners mathematics while they are learning English pose many challenges for mathematics teachers and highlight the need to focus on language-processing issues related to teaching mathematical content. Two realistic-type problems from high-stakes tests are used to illustrate the complex interactions between culture, language, and mathematical learning. The analyses focus on aspects of the problems that potentially increase cognitive demands for second-language learners. An analytical framework is presented that is designed to enable mathematics teachers to identify critical elements in problems and the learning environment that contribute to increased cognitive demands for students of English as a second language. The framework is proposed as a cycle of teacher reflection that would extend a constructivist model of teaching to include broader linguistic, cultural, and cognitive processing issues of mathematics teaching, as well as enable teachers to develop more accurate mental models of student learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Mentoring Preservice Teachers for Development and Growth of Professional Knowledge.
- Author
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Campbell, Mark Robin and Brummett, Verna M.
- Subjects
MENTORING in education ,STUDENT teachers ,COLLEGE teachers ,UNIVERSITY faculty ,CAREER development ,EDUCATION ,MUSIC education ,MUSIC teachers - Abstract
The article focuses on the collaboration between the student, the university faculty member, and the cooperating teacher, in mentoring preservice teachers. It seems self-evident that mentoring is an important topic in the professional development of teachers. The interest of the National Association for Music Education in the aforementioned topic is acknowledged in "The publication of Great Beginnings for Music Teachers: Mentoring and Supporting New Teachers." Mentoring for professional growth rests on empowering prospective teachers to think about expanded ways of engaging in music and in pedagogy.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Ethnicity versus Ethnic Identity: What Predicts Substance Use Norms and Behaviors?
- Author
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Holley, Lynn C., Kulis, Stephen, Marsiglia, Flavio Francisco, and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
MIDDLE school students ,ETHNICITY ,AGE ,GENDER ,SUBSTANCE use of youth ,OUTCOME assessment (Social services) ,SOCIAL work research ,SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Although researchers often incorporate various measures of ethnicity and ethnic identity (EI) into research about substance use, the relationships among ethnicity, EI, and substance use remain unclear (Marsiglia, Kulis, & Hecht, 2001: Phinney, 1996). This paper explores whether ethnicity and three EI instruments are useful in predicting substance use outcomes among three samples of ethnically diverse middle school youth. Findings include that age, gender, and/or racial or ethnic group membership influenced the strength of EI and that age, sex, and strength of EI influence substance use norms and behaviors. In each case where significant effects were obtained, a stronger sense of EI as measured by two of the instruments predicted more negative attitudes toward, and less use of, alcohol, cigarettes, and marijuana. Implications for preventing substance use among middle school youth by building on and strengthening ethnic identity are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Body image, acculturation, and substance abuse among boys and girls in the Southwest.
- Author
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Nieri, Tanya, Kulis, Stephen, Keith, Verna M., and Hurdle, Donna
- Subjects
DRUG abuse ,MIDDLE school students ,BODY image ,ACCULTURATION ,MEXICAN American students ,SUBSTANCE use of youth ,YOUTH & alcohol ,SMOKING - Abstract
This study explored body image as measured by perceptions of weight and appearance and its impact on adolescent drug use among predominately Mexican American middle school students in the southwest. Outcomes analyzed included lifetime and recent alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use and antidrug norms. Disliking one's looks was more of a risk factor for boys, whereas negative weight perceptions were more of a risk factor for girls. Relative to more acculturated (English-dominant) Latinos (N=903), non-Latino Whites (N=121), and other non-Latino youth (N=107), less acculturated (Spanish-dominant) Latino youth (N=212) reported the poorest body image. However, more acculturated Latino youth with poor body image had the greatest risk of substance use. More acculturated Latino boys who disliked their looks reported relatively greater amounts of recent alcohol use, and those who rated their bodies as too thin reported higher lifetime cigarette use, a greater amount and frequency of recent cigarette use, and weaker antidrug norms. More acculturated Latina girls who thought they were too fat reported a greater amount and frequency of recent cigarette use. These findings suggest that low levels of acculturation may protect some Latino youth with poor body image from coping via substance use. In addition, they suggest that poor body image among some Latinos may result less from adoption of American thinness ideals but rather from attitudes and behaviors that devalue the characteristics of Latino appearance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Pinball Wizards of the Energy Retail Markets.
- Author
-
Ray, Verna M.
- Subjects
ENERGY industries ,ELECTRICITY ,NATURAL gas ,MARKETING ,PRICES - Abstract
Reports on the competition in the retail electricity and natural gas markets in the U.S. Establishment of a competing marketing strategies by energy service providers; Adjustments of prices down from the original price to prevent retail providers from eroding their customer base; Estimation of about 17 percent of power generation in the U.S. accounts for natural gas.
- Published
- 2005
40. Assessing the effects of race and ethnicity on use of complementary and alternative therapies in the USA.
- Author
-
Keith, Verna M., Kronenfeld, Jennie J., Rivers, Patrick A., and Liang, Su-ying
- Subjects
ALTERNATIVE medicine ,THERAPEUTICS ,ETHNIC groups ,ETHNOLOGY ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Objective To investigate the use of alternative therapies among different racial/ethnic groups in the USA. Specifically, we examined whether alternative medicine use differs for working aged whites, Asian Americans, African Americans, and Hispanics. Design Using the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, racial differences in utilization were investigated at two levels: (1) the bivariate level with no controls for other factors and (2) at the multivariate level with controls for age, sex, region, marital status, education, income, health status, satisfaction with conventional healthcare, and access measures. Results Americans in this sample population used alternative and complementary therapies at a fairly low rate (6.5%). This 6.5%, however, was not consistent across all groups. African Americans and Hispanics were less likely than whites to utilize alternative therapies, whereas Asian Americans did not differ significantly from whites. Conclusions The use of alternative and complementary therapies varied across racial/ethnic groups. Evidence showed that individuals who were dissatisfied with the availability of conventional healthcare, who were in poor health, but very satisfied with their conventional provider were more likely to use complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies. The addition of these variables to a logistic regression model did not change the findings for differential use by ethnicity, the relative ranking of groups, or the overall strength of the relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Results of the implementation of liquid-based cytology-SurePath in the Ontario screening program.
- Author
-
Colgan, Terence J., McLachlin, C. Meg, Cotterchio, Michelle, Howlett, Robbi, Seidenfeld, Allan M., and Mai, Verna M.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Work and Housework Conditions and Depressive Symptoms Among Married Women: The Importance of Occupational Status.
- Author
-
Riley, Anna L. and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
MENTAL health ,WOMEN'S health ,HOME economics ,MENTAL depression ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,OCCUPATIONS - Abstract
Assesses the impact of employment on women's mental health. Examination of housewives' subjective evaluations of their housework; Evaluation of paid employment among groups of professional, sales-clerical and service-blue collar wives; Effects of subjective working conditions on depressive symptoms among wives who are full-time homemakers.
- Published
- 2003
43. Professional Teaching Portfolios: For Pros and Preservice Teachers Alike.
- Author
-
Campbell, Mark Robin and Brummett, Verna M.
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,PORTFOLIOS in education - Abstract
Focuses on a teaching portfolio which is an effective vehicle for presentation of the ongoing development of a teacher's knowledge, skills, and abilities. Types of teaching portfolios; Purposes for the collection and organization of materials; Reflection and selection of materials related to the purpose and professional goals; Components of a portfolio.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Maintaining Functional Independence in Elderly Adults: The Roles of Health Status and Financial Resources in Predicting Home Modifications and Use of Mobility Equipment.
- Author
-
Mathieson, Kathleen M., Kronenfeld, Jennie Jacobs, and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
HEALTH of older people ,SOCIAL conditions of older people - Abstract
Presents a study that investigated whether health status and financial resources were important predictors of two types of functional adaptations among elderly adults. Prediction of home modifications and equipment use for activities of daily living (ADL); Effects of ADL on functional adaptations; Implications of the study for public health.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. THE BLACKER THE BERRY.
- Author
-
Thompson, Maxine S. and Keith, Verna M.
- Abstract
Using data from the National Survey of Black Americans, this study examines the way in which gender socially constructs the importance of skin tone for evaluations of self-worth and self-competence. Skin tone has negative effects on both self-esteem and self-efficacy but operates in different domains of the self for men and for women. Skin color is an important predictor of self-esteem for Black women but not Black men. And color predicts self-efficacy for Black men but not Black women. This pattern conforms to traditional gendered expectations of masculinity and femininity. Moreover, there are conditions of success that allow women to escape the effects of colorism. The impact of skin tone on self-esteem was much weaker for women from higher social class. Those who had lower self-esteem scores were dark-skinned women from working classes and dark-skinned women who were judged unattractive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Rheumatoid factor positive plasma and humoral cytotoxicity to malignant melanoma.
- Author
-
Twomey, Jeremiah J., Rossen, Roger D., Lewis, Verna M., Morgan, A. Charles, and McCormick, Kenneth J.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Plasma thymic hormone activity in patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis.
- Author
-
Kirkpatrick, C. H., Greenberg, Lynn E., Chapman, S. W., Goldstein, G., Lewis, Verna M., and Twomey, J. J.
- Subjects
CANDIDIASIS ,THYMIC hormones ,BLOOD plasma ,LYMPHOID tissue ,MYCOSES ,THYMUS extract - Abstract
To further characterize the immunological abnormalities in patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis, the thymic hormone activity in their plasma was measured. Of the sixteen patients in the study, seven had chronic diffuse candidiasis, five had candidiasis with endocrinopathies and four had candidiasis with thymoma. Only one patient, an anergic child with chronic diffuse candidiasis had severe deficiency of plasma thymic hormone activity. Two patients, a woman with candidiasis and multiple endocrinopathies and an elderly man with metastatic epithelial thymoma had supranomal values. These studies indicate that the immunological deficit in most patients with these forms of chronic mucucutaneous candidiasis is not due to deficiency of a thymic inductive activity and suggest that an intrinsic defect exists in the maturation of antigen-responsive lymphoid cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1978
48. The current differential in black and white life expectancy.
- Author
-
Keith, Verna M., Smith, David P., Keith, V M, and Smith, D P
- Subjects
POPULATION ,LIFE expectancy ,HEALTH ,GENDER ,LONGEVITY ,QUALITY of life ,BLACK people ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CAUSES of death ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,SEX distribution ,STATISTICS ,WHITE people ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
The 1980 National Center for Health Statistics life tables for the U.S. black and white populations reveal a difference in life expectancy of 7 years between black and white males and 6 years between black and white females. Using cause-substituted life tables, we show that a number of causes of death contribute to the difference. The largest contributors are cardiovascular disease for both sexes and homicide and cancer for males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Effects of positive and negative social exchanges with various sources on depressive symptoms in...
- Author
-
Okun, Morris A. and Keith, Verna M.
- Subjects
INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
Presents a study which examined the positive and negative social exchanges with relationships, and the depressive symptoms of younger and older men and women. Analysis of younger adults and older adults; Method used to conduct the study; Examination of the buffering effect among the different groups; Findings of the study.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) Factors Predisposing to and Protecting Against Graves' Eye Disease.
- Author
-
Frecker, Maxine, Mercer, Gregory, Skanes, Verna M., and Farid, Nadir R.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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