84 results on '"Ashley M Fox"'
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2. Insider–Outsider Politics and Support for Universal Health Coverage in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
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Ashley M. Fox and Megan Reynolds
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Development - Abstract
When and why does the public support redistributive policies that seek to provide social risk protection through universal health financing? One central political dilemma in establishing systems of universal health coverage (UHC) in low- and middle-income countries is the small tax base available to contribute to pooled financing of healthcare. Middle-class workers in the formal sector (labor market insiders) may already get health coverage through the state or private insurers, leaving them little incentive to contribute to UHC that will primarily benefit indigent workers in the informal sector (labor market outsiders). Applying the insider–outsider politics framework, we explore attitudes toward UHC using recent data from Afrobarometer surveys in 36 countries in Sub-Saharan and North Africa. We find that, in spite of growing attention to universal coverage among policymakers, support from the average citizen is low, though variable, across countries. Further, in contrast with expectation, economically secure labor market insiders are more willing than labor market outsiders to pay more in taxes to finance health coverage. However, support for more tax financing of health services was dependent on trust in government and perceptions of government efficacy. Trust in the government’s capacity to use tax financing effectively may be a more important determinant of support for UHC than rational self-interest.
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- 2022
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3. Does media slant polarize compliance with science-based public health recommendations? Effects of media consumption patterns on COVID-19 attitudes and behaviors in the United States
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Yongjin Choi and Ashley M Fox
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Attitude ,SARS-CoV-2 ,education ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Public Health ,Pandemics ,United States ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Has political polarization undermined the media’ informational role during the COVID-19 pandemic? Recent studies show that politicized reporting from conservative media discouraged compliance with COVID-19 guidelines in the U.S. However, greater attention to the 24-hour news cycle may make high-consumption viewers better factually informed regardless of the source. We examine how the extent of media consumption affects people’s emotions, attitudes, and behaviors toward the pandemic. With an online survey of 1128 respondents, we found a strong convergence in anxiety and health-protective behaviors in more avid media viewers regardless of media outlet while finding a divergence in attitudes toward specific mitigation strategies.
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- 2021
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4. What’s the Hold Up? The FDA’s Delayed Implementation of Menu-Labeling Policy
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Ashley M. Fox and Wenhui Feng
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Marketing ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Mandate ,Advertising ,Business ,Federal law ,Menu labeling - Abstract
Calorie labeling on menus became a federal law in 2010 but was not implemented until 2018, 8 years after adoption. This study reconstructs the history of the federal menu-labeling mandate using a process-tracing approach and finds that the delays in implementation resulted not from direct agency capture by the regulated industry, but rather from a system of indirect influence whereby lawmakers continue to influence policy-making even after adoption. Excessive legislative control can contribute to substantial implementation delays that undermine legislative intent. However, administrative agencies can serve as trustees to hold elected officials accountable to their own policy commitments.
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- 2021
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5. Social Media, Vaccines, and Partisan Division of Health Information
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Devon Greyson, Catherine Dumas, Ashley M. Fox, Kolina Koltai, and Loni Hagen
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Politics ,General Computer Science ,business.industry ,Political science ,Social media ,Health information ,Library and Information Sciences ,Division (mathematics) ,Public relations ,business - Published
- 2021
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6. 'It became a fight:' the political economy of adopting and owning the Affordable Medicines Facility-malaria (AMFm) pilot in Ghana
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Heather Lanthorn, Ashley M. Fox, Michael R. Reich, Dylan Groves, Jesse B. Bump, and Frank Boateng
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To be filled in at a later date!...
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- 2022
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7. State‐level social safety nets for families coping with job loss
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Ashley M. Fox, Megan Reynolds, and Yvette Young
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Coping (psychology) ,Median income ,Sociology and Political Science ,050204 development studies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Safety net ,05 social sciences ,Welfare state ,Policy studies ,0502 economics and business ,Unemployment ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Psychological resilience ,050207 economics ,media_common ,Social policy - Abstract
Critics of the modern American welfare state allege that safety net benefits discourage work by providing sufficient resources to replace earned income. Yet, research in social policy has long depicted the US safety net as parsimonious and inadequate relative to its European counterparts, even when considering benefits from programs that reward favorable work histories. Other theories predict variability across states and regional clustering even amid low overall spending. Moreover, the recent COVID-19 outbreak has exposed the insufficiency and lack of resilience of the major US safety nets in the face of unprecedented unemployment. This study examines the benefit expenditures on three safety net programs available to American families with recently unemployed breadwinners—Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, and Unemployment Insurance—as a proportion of median annual income for a given state-year between 1997 and 2017. We examine the overall spending as well as variability and clustering across states. We find that the average benefit expenditure comprises only 42% of median income, and while there is substantial variability around this average, only one state is above 78%. We also find that spending levels appear to be regionally clustered. We conclude that safety nets for the recently unemployed and their families are weak relative to earned income and that the extent of this weakness varies by state, with some regional patterning. © 2021 Policy Studies Organization
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- 2021
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8. Enhanced unemployment benefits, mental health, and substance use among low-income households during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Soyun Jeong and Ashley M. Fox
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Health (social science) ,History and Philosophy of Science - Published
- 2023
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9. Trends In State Medicaid Eligibility, Enrollment Rules, And Benefits
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Ashley M. Fox, Jennifer Zeitlin, Elizabeth A. Howell, and Wenhui Feng
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Public economics ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public health ,Immigration ,Differential (mechanical device) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Children's Health Insurance Program ,State (polity) ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,Federalism ,0305 other medical science ,Medicaid ,health care economics and organizations ,Health policy ,media_common - Abstract
Recent literature has focused on the impact of the differential adoption by states of the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion. However, additional Medicaid policy dimensions exist where state-level trends in coverage have varied, including eligibility, benefits, and administrative burden, both before and after implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
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- 2020
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10. Early Rehabilitation Following Saddle Pulmonary Embolism: Perspective From Physical Therapist as Patient
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Colleen G. Hergott, Kevin E. Brueilly, Jeffrey S. Dowling, and Ashley M. Fox
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Perspective (graphical) ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary embolism ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,business ,Physical therapist ,Early rehabilitation ,Saddle - Published
- 2020
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11. Mistrust in public health institutions is a stronger predictor of vaccine hesitancy and uptake than Trust in Trump
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Yongjin Choi and Ashley M. Fox
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Adult ,Health (social science) ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Humans ,COVID-19 ,Public Health ,Vaccination Hesitancy ,Trust - Abstract
This study examines the sources of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and refusal in Americans by decomposing different forms of government trust/mistrust including trust in Trump and mistrust in public health institutions.Using linear panel regression models with data from 5,446 US adults (37,761 responses) from the Understanding America Survey, the likelihoods of vaccine hesitancy, uptake, and trust in various information sources were examined.We find that the likelihoods of hesitancy and having negative perceptions of COVID-19 vaccines were consistently much higher among PHI mistrusters, showing even a stronger hesitancy than Trump trusters. This tendency has persisted over time, resulting in only 49% of PHI mistrusters having been vaccinated in the most recent survey wave. However, a large portion of PHI mistrusters still trusted physicians, family, and friends. These findings suggest that mistrust in PHIs is a salient predictor of vaccine hesitancy and reduced uptake on its own, which is compounded by trust in Trump.
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- 2021
12. Is the male disadvantage real? Cross-national variations in sex gaps in COVID-19 incidence and mortality
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Minah Kang, Younhee Kim, Green Bae, Ashley M. Fox, Heeun Kim, and Ryung S. Kim
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Male ,Gender equality ,Inequality ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Mortality rate ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Male mortality ,COVID-19 ,Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Mortality ,business ,Disadvantage ,Demography ,media_common ,Cross national - Abstract
Although the excess male mortality from COVID-19 is well-known, the variations in sex gaps in incidence and mortality across countries and the sources of such variations are not well understood. This study explored the patterns and the sources of variation in the sex gap in COVID-19 incidence and mortality rates across 100 countries where sex-disaggregated cases and deaths were available as of September 2020. Our results show that there is generally a male disadvantage in both incidence and mortality; however, COVID-19 incidence exhibited a lower male disadvantage (1.2 times higher risk for males) than COVID-19 mortality (1.5 times higher risk for males). The extent of male disadvantages in COVID-19 outcomes across countries varied by societal gender inequalities and behavioural factors. Greater gender equality, both socially and behaviourally, was associated with more equal COVID-19 incidence and mortality between men and women. The findings imply that male disadvantages in COVID-19 outcomes, particularly incidence, are socially determined, whereas further investigation is needed to understand behavioural and biological elements yielding a male disadvantage in mortality.
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- 2021
13. Administrative Easing: Rule Reduction and Medicaid Enrollment
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Edmund C. Stazyk, Wenhui Feng, and Ashley M. Fox
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Marketing ,Reduction (complexity) ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Medicaid - Published
- 2019
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14. Global aid for nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions and proportion of stunted children across low- and middle-income countries: does aid matter?
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Hina Khalid, Ashley M. Fox, and Sitara Gill
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Databases, Factual ,Creditor ,Psychological intervention ,Nutritional Status ,Developing country ,Global Health ,World Development Indicators ,Nutrition Policy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,0502 economics and business ,Per capita ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,050207 economics ,Child ,Developing Countries ,Growth Disorders ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Child mortality ,Malnutrition ,Agriculture ,Child, Preschool ,business - Abstract
Development assistance for health (DAH) has increased dramatically over the past two decades, and this increase has led to a debate on the benefits and perverse effects of scaling-up vs scaling back DAH, and the type of interventions DAH should support. Nutrition remains a contested category viewed as essential to achieving primary healthcare objectives but as falling outside of the direct ambit of the health system. Thus, despite the increase in DAH, it continues to remain an underfunded area and little is known about the relationship between aid for nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions and the proportion of stunted children across low- and middle-income countries. We hypothesize that as nutrition-specific aid targets local needs of countries and is less fungible than nutrition-sensitive aid, it will contribute more to a reduction in the proportion of stunted children, with the steepest gains among countries that have the highest burden of malnutrition. We use fixed-effects regressions to examine the relationship between the proportion of stunted children and aid for nutrition interventions (specific and sensitive) to 116 low- and middle-income countries (2002–16). We construct our panel using the Creditor Reporting System, Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation, Food and Agriculture Organization, World Health Organization and World Development indicators databases. We find a one-dollar increase in per capita nutrition-specific aid is associated with a reduction in the proportion of stunted children by 0.004 (P
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- 2019
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15. Political Economy of Reform under US Federalism: Adopting Single-Payer Health Coverage in New York State
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Ashley M. Fox and Yongjin Choi
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Gridlock ,Political opportunity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,New York ,Opposition (politics) ,Federal Government ,Health Informatics ,universal health coverage ,political economy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Politics ,Health Information Management ,Universal Health Insurance ,050602 political science & public administration ,Healthcare Financing ,Humans ,education ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,lcsh:R5-920 ,030505 public health ,Equity (economics) ,single-payer ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Democracy ,0506 political science ,Health Care Reform ,Political economy ,Federalism ,Business ,0305 other medical science ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,new york health act - Abstract
The US remains the only high-income country that lacks a universal health financing system and instead relies on a fragmented system with the largest segment of the population receiving health insurance through private, voluntary employer-sponsored health insurance plans. While not "universal" in the sense of being mandatory and tax-financed, through a series of reforms, the US has managed to provide some form of health insurance coverage to 90% of the population. Yet, the high cost of this system, the insufficient coverage afforded to many, and continued concerns about equity have led to calls for a national health insurance program that can reduce costs across the board while providing high-quality coverage for all. Given the policy gridlock at the national level, the states have often sought to achieve universal health financing on their own, but these bills have met with little success so far. Why has the ideal of states as "laboratories of democracy" failed to produce policy change towards national health insurance? This article examines the prospects for the New York Health Act, a single-payer bill that would create a universal health financing plan for all New York State residents. Applying the Political Economy of Health Financing Framework, we analyze the politics of health reform in New York State and identify strategies to overcome opposition to this policy proposal. We find that while a clear political opportunity is in place, the prospects for adoption remain low given the power of symbolic politics and institutional inertia on the reform process.
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- 2019
16. Health Insurance Loss during COVID-19 May Increase Support for Universal Health Coverage
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Heather E. Lanthorn, Kevin Croke, Ashley M. Fox, and Yongjin Choi
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Safety net ,Population ,Context (language use) ,Public opinion ,Medicare ,Recession ,Insurance Coverage ,State Medicine ,Universal Health Insurance ,Humans ,education ,Pandemics ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Insurance, Health ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Health Policy ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,COVID-19 ,United States ,Vignette ,Unemployment ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Direct experience - Abstract
CONTEXT: The United States is the only high-income country that relies on employer-sponsored health coverage to insure a majority of its population, and millions of Americans lost employer-sponsored health insurance during the COVID-19-induced economic downturn. We examine public opinion toward universal health coverage policies in this context. METHODS: Through a survey of 1,211 Americans in June 2020, we examine the influence of health insurance loss on support for Medicare for All (M4A) in two ways. First, we examine associations between pandemic-related health insurance loss and M4A support. Second, we experimentally prime some respondents with a vignette of a sympathetic victim losing employer-sponsored coverage during COVID-19. As a secondary outcome, we examine the effect of these exposures on support for the Affordable Care Act. FINDINGS: We find that directly experiencing recent health insurance loss is strongly associated (10 pp, p
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- 2021
17. Empowerment and HIV Risk Behaviors in Couples: Modeling the Theory of Gender and Power in an African Context
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Ashley M. Fox, Jane N. Mutanga, Joel Lee, Amara E. Ezeamama, Stephen L. Rathbun, Makhabele Nolana Woolfork, and Andrea Swartzendruber
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sub-Saharan Africa ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Theory of Gender and Power ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV ,Context (language use) ,medicine.disease_cause ,Hiv risk ,Developmental psychology ,Power (social and political) ,Power dynamics ,empowerment ,medicine ,Original Article ,Psychology ,Empowerment ,media_common - Abstract
Background: Young women and girls in Eastern and Southern Africa are at elevated risk of acquiring human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) compared with men, largely due to power dynamics within heterosexual relationships that contribute to HIV risk behaviors. Few studies employ a comprehensive framework to examine divisions between men and women and HIV risk behaviors in an African context. Thus, we examined associations between levels of women's empowerment and HIV risk behaviors applying the Theory of Gender and Power. Methods: We used logistic regression (adjusted odds ratios or AORs) to assess associations between women's empowerment indicators and HIV risk behaviors (multiple sexual partners) and self-efficacy (ability to negotiate sex/sex refusal) with couples data (n = 12,670) from Malawi, Namibia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. Results: Specifically, key drivers of high levels of empowerment among women were household decision-making involvement, female economic independence, and rejecting all reasons for wife-beating. Furthermore, higher levels of women's empowerment in coupled relationships was associated with safer sex negotiation in Malawi (AOR = 1.57, p
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- 2021
18. Does Framing Coronavirus in Terms of Disparities Reduce or Increase Vaccine Hesitancy?
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Yongjin Choi and Ashley M. Fox
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education.field_of_study ,Resentment ,Special Issue Abstract ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Racism ,Injustice ,Framing (social sciences) ,Justice (ethics) ,education ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Health communication ,News media ,media_common - Abstract
Research Objective Studies on health communication have suggested that acknowledging past injustice is an important step in reducing hesitancy towards vaccination among African‐Americans. However, few studies have tested this messaging through experimental approaches. Furthermore, research on racial priming suggests that framing messages in terms of prioritization of one racial group over another could trigger resentment in the out‐group. As the vaccine roll‐out continues in the US, policymakers are looking for ways to increase vaccine confidence and uptake, particularly in more hesitant populations. Through a survey experiment, this study asks how popular representations of race‐ethnic disparities in Coronavirus cases and deaths impacts vaccine hesitancy in a racially diverse sample of New Yorkers. Study Design Using a survey experiment, respondents were randomized to receive a newspaper prime recommending minority prioritization for vaccination acknowledging historical racism versus a control article without a minority prioritization focus. Respondents were then asked a series of questions about their attitudes towards vaccines, racial justice and socio‐demographics. We compared responses of the experimental versus control condition overall and stratified by race‐ethnicity. Population Studied 1,353 New York State residents recruited through the survey firm Qualtrics between November 23‐December 8. Black and Hispanic respondents were oversampled producing a sample of 429 NH Whites; 443 NH Blacks and 481 Hispanics. Respondents were drawn from both Downstate (43%) from Upstate (57%). Principal Findings We find no effects of the prime on respondents' intention to vaccinate against Coronavirus altogether and interacted with race‐ethnicity. We explore correlates of vaccine hesitancy and find that while African‐Americans are more vaccine hesitant than other race‐ethnic groups, identifying politically as an independent, being female and watching alternative news media are each stronger predictors of hesitancy. Qualitatively examining reasons for hesitancy or confidence, we find that conspiracy beliefs do not figure prominently in people's vaccine hesitancy, but rather more quotidian (and legitimate) concerns about the speed of the development process and generalized lack of trust in the political and scientific institutions producing the vaccine contributing to a desire to “wait and see.” These themes cut across race‐ethnic groups. Conclusions We conclude that strong hesitancy views may be relatively fixed and difficult to change at least with simple messaging campaigns among a segment of the population that holds longstanding deep‐seated skepticism towards established institutions (justified or not). Nor, do simple messaging campaigns animate racial resentment in out‐groups in a way that will influence their behavior. Rather, weaker hesitancy views may give way to willingness relative quickly as more people take the vaccine. Implications for Policy or Practice While vaccine hesitancy is considered to be a major barrier to widespread uptake of the Coronavirus vaccine, especially among African‐Americans, our results suggest that it is a relatively small portion of the population that is hesitant, but that “more than messaging” will be required to influence behavioral intentions to vaccinate. Primary Funding Source State of New York
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- 2021
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19. Trends In State Medicaid Eligibility, Enrollment Rules, And Benefits
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Ashley M, Fox, Wenhui, Feng, Jennifer, Zeitlin, and Elizabeth A, Howell
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Medicaid ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,Eligibility Determination ,Humans ,Health Services Accessibility ,Insurance Coverage ,United States - Abstract
Recent literature has focused on the impact of the differential adoption by states of the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion. However, additional Medicaid policy dimensions exist where state-level trends in coverage have varied, including eligibility, benefits, and administrative burden, both before and after implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
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- 2020
20. Is less more? Examining the relationship between food assistance benefit levels and childhood weight
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Ming Wen, Megan Reynolds, Michael W. Varner, and Ashley M. Fox
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Health (social science) ,Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program ,Article ,Supplemental nutrition assistance program ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Obesity ,lcsh:Social sciences (General) ,Body mass index ,Social policy ,030505 public health ,integumentary system ,Health Policy ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Snap ,Food assistance ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,Child development ,stomatognathic diseases ,Panel Study of Income Dynamics ,nervous system ,Safety-net benefits ,lcsh:H1-99 ,Panel study of income dynamics child development supplement ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Weight gain - Abstract
Background The Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is a critical lifeline for millions of low-income US families, but some studies suggests that it may inadvertently increase obesity risk. Building on research contesting the SNAP-obesity link, we examine the effect of SNAP participation on BMI among multiyear participants at varying levels of SNAP benefit levels to provide some of the first evidence on the relationship between SNAP participation, state-level SNAP resources, and body weight. We focus on children given the strong links between early-life obesity and later-life health. Methods Linking state-level data on SNAP benefit levels with three waves of longitudinal individual-level data from the Child Development Supplement of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we use child- and state-level fixed effects to examine whether exogenous differences in SNAP benefit allotments influence the relationship between SNAP participation and weight gain. Results Lower SNAP benefit levels were associated with only modest increases in BMI among children; higher benefit levels showed no association with BMI. Conclusions Although concerns that more food assistance promotes obesity have spurred calls for cuts in the SNAP program, we find the opposite — that SNAP participation is associated with an increase in childhood BMI only when benefit levels are low. This study adds to the mounting evidence suggesting that SNAP does not cause obesity. It also contributes to the literature on the political economy of health, especially that pertaining to social policy variation across US states., Highlights • Observational studies link SNAP participation and higher bodyweight. • SNAP-obesity link has spurred calls for retrenchment of the SNAP program. • Meager benefits may help to explain the SNAP-obesity link. • SNAP participation positively associated with child BMI only when benefits are small. • Recently proposed SNAP budget cuts may inadvertently increase risk of obesity.
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- 2020
21. Political and Governance Challenges to Achieving Global HIV Goals with Injecting Drug Users: The Case of Pakistan
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Hina Khalid and Ashley M. Fox
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Civil society ,Economic growth ,Health (social science) ,hiv/aids ,Leadership and Management ,Service delivery framework ,HIV Infections ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,south asia ,Interviews as Topic ,Politics ,Government Agencies ,Health Information Management ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Political science ,medicine ,Humans ,Pakistan ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,injecting drug users ,Government ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Health Policy ,Corporate governance ,Administrative Personnel ,political commitment ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,Global governance ,Interinstitutional Relations ,governance ,Original Article ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Background The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) has recently set the ambitious “90-90-90 target” of having 90% of people living with HIV (PLHIV) know their status, receive antiretroviral therapy (ART), and achieve viral suppression by 2020. This ambitious new goal is occurring in a context of global “scale-down” following nearly a decade of heightened investment in HIV prevention and treatment efforts. Arguably international goals spur action, however, setting unrealistic goals that do not take weak health systems and variations in the nature of the epidemic across countries into consideration may set them up for failure in unproductive ways that lead to a decline in confidence in global governance institutions. This study explores how policy actors tasked with implementing HIV programs navigate the competing demands placed upon them by development targets and national politics, particularly in the current context of waning international investments towards HIV. Methods To examine these questions, we interviewed 29 key informants comprising health experts in donor organizations and government employees in HIV programs in Pakistan, a country where HIV programs must compete with other issues for attention. Themes were identified inductively through an iterative process and findings were triangulated with various data sources and existing literature. Results We found both political and governance challenges to achieving the target, particularly in the context of the global HIV scale-down. Political challenges included, low and heterogeneous political commitment for HIV and a conservative legal environment that contributed towards a ban on opiate substitution therapy, creating low treatment coverage. Governance challenges includedstrained state and non-governmental organization (NGO) relations creating a hostile service delivery environment, weak bureaucratic and civil society capacity contributing to poor regulation of the health infrastructure, and resource mismanagement on both the part of the government and NGOs. Conclusion Our findings suggest that in a context of waning international attention to HIV, policy actors on the ground face a number of practical hurdles to achieving the ambitious targets set out by international agencies. Greater attention to the political and governance challenges of implementing HIV programs in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) could help technical assistance agencies to develop more realistic implementation plans.
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- 2019
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22. Menu labels, for better, and worse? Exploring socio-economic and race-ethnic differences in menu label use in a national sample
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Ashley M. Fox and Wenhui Feng
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Adult ,Male ,Restaurants ,National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Ethnic group ,Sample (statistics) ,Health literacy ,Literacy ,Food Preferences ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Race (biology) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Food Labeling ,Numeracy ,Food choice ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,health care economics and organizations ,General Psychology ,media_common ,030505 public health ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Racial Groups ,Advertising ,Middle Aged ,Nutrition Surveys ,Logistic Models ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
Menu calorie labeling aims to empower customers to make healthier food choices, but researchers have questioned whether labels will empower those with greater health literacy, literacy or numeracy more, possibly reinforcing race-ethnic or socioeconomic inequalities in obesity. The goal of this study was to investigate differences in seeing and using restaurant menu calorie labels and whether differences have compounded over time. Using data from three rounds of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey covering the period 2007-2014, we investigate race-ethnic and socio-economic differences in menu label usage over time adjusting for sex, age and body weight. While menu label usage increased over time, not all groups increased their use equally. While we find that Blacks and Hispanics use labels more than Whites in sit-down restaurants, more educated individuals, higher income groups and Whites each increased the degree to which they saw and/or used labels in certain settings compared with other groups. This study reinforces concerns that menu-calorie labeling may exacerbate socio-economic and certain race-ethnic obesity differences. As menu labeling policy moves forward to be implemented federally, more attention may need to be diverted to educational campaigns accompanying the implementation and improving the labels so the information is easier to use.
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- 2018
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23. How Single-payer Stacks Up: Evaluating Different Models of Universal Health Coverage on Cost, Access, and Quality
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Roland Poirier and Ashley M. Fox
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National Health Programs ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prepayment of loan ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,Universal Health Insurance ,Health care ,Humans ,Revenue ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Social determinants of health ,Single-Payer System ,Quality of Health Care ,media_common ,Public economics ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Health Care Costs ,Repeal ,United States ,Patient Satisfaction ,Models, Organizational ,Performance indicator ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Described as “universal prepayment,” the national health insurance (or single-payer) model of universal health coverage is increasingly promoted by international actors as a means of raising revenue for health care and improving social risk protection in low- and middle-income countries. Likewise, in the United States, the recent failed efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act have renewed debate about where to go next with health reform and arguably opened the door for a single-payer, Medicare-for-All plan, an alternative once considered politically infeasible. Policy debates about single-payer or national health insurance in the United States and abroad have relied heavily on Canada’s system as an ideal-typical single-payer system but have not systematically examined health system performance indicators across different universal coverage models. Using available cross-national data, we categorize countries with universal coverage into those best exemplifying national health insurance (single-payer), national health service, and social health insurance models and compare them to the United States in terms of cost, access, and quality. Through this comparison, we find that many critiques of single-payer are based on misconceptions or are factually incorrect, but also that single-payer is not the only option for achieving universal coverage in the United States and internationally.
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- 2018
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24. Does Decentralization Improve Health System Performance and Outcomes in Low- and Middle-Income Countries? A Systematic Review of Evidence From Quantitative Studies
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Ashley M. Fox and Adenantera Dwicaksono
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Public economics ,Health Policy ,Public health ,Corporate governance ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Developing country ,Context (language use) ,Decentralization ,0506 political science ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,050602 political science & public administration ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,Health care reform ,International development ,Empirical evidence - Abstract
Policy Points: For more than 3 decades, international development agencies have advocated health system decentralization to improve health system performance in low- and middle-income countries. We found little rigorous evidence documenting the impact of decentralization processes on health system performance or outcomes in part due to challenges in measuring such far-reaching and multifaceted system-level changes. We propose a renewed research agenda that focuses on discrete definitions of decentralization and how institutional factors and mechanisms affect health system performance and outcomes within the general context of decentralized governance structures. Context Despite the widespread adoption of decentralization reforms as a means to improve public service delivery in developing countries since the 1980s, empirical evidence of the role of decentralization on health system improvement is still limited and inconclusive. This study reviewed studies published from 2000 to 2016 with adequate research designs to identify evidence on whether and how decentralization processes have impacted health systems. Methods We conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed journal articles from the public health and social science literature. We searched for articles within 9 databases using predefined search terms reflecting decentralization and health system constructs. Inclusion criteria were original research articles, low- and middle-income country settings, quantifiable outcome measures, and study designs that use comparisons or statistical adjustments. We excluded studies in high-income country settings and/or published in a non-English language. Findings Sixteen studies met our prespecified inclusion and exclusion criteria and were grouped based on outcomes measured: health system inputs (n = 3), performance (n = 7), and health outcomes (n = 7). Numerous studies addressing conceptual issues related to decentralization but without any attempt at empirical estimation were excluded. Overall, we found mixed results regarding the effects of decentralization on health system indicators with seemingly beneficial effects on health system performance and health outcomes. Only 10 studies were considered to have relatively low risks of bias. Conclusions This study reveals the limited empirical knowledge of the impact of decentralization on health system performance. Mixed empirical findings on the role of decentralization on health system performance and outcomes highlight the complexity of decentralization processes and their systemwide effects. Thus, we propose a renewed research agenda that focuses on discrete definitions of decentralization and how institutional factors and mechanisms affect health system performance and outcomes within the general context of decentralized governance structures.
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- 2018
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25. Lead exposure and academic achievement: evidence from childhood lead poisoning prevention efforts
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Lucy C. Sorensen, Heyjie Jung, Erika G. Martin, and Ashley M. Fox
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Economics and Econometrics ,05 social sciences ,Ethnic group ,Academic achievement ,medicine.disease ,Lead poisoning ,Test (assessment) ,Developmental psychology ,Economic inequality ,0502 economics and business ,medicine ,Early childhood ,050207 economics ,050205 econometrics ,Demography ,Education economics ,Social policy - Abstract
Though the adverse consequences of lead exposure in children have been well known for over a century, the recent Flint water crisis has drawn renewed attention to the impacts of lead exposure on human health and development. This study considers connections to educational outcomes, asking whether population-level lead exposure in early childhood influences later academic achievement and racial achievement gaps. It assesses the effectiveness of recent local- and state-level lead hazard control programs in mitigating exposure and uses this source of exogenous variation in early childhood exposure across birth cohorts to draw inferences about the long-term effects of lead on mean student test scores. Our findings indicate that lead hazard control grants reduced lead poisoning incidents by over 70% of the baseline prevalence. And each one percentage point reduction in lead poisoning in early childhood translated to a growth of 0.04 standard deviations in student math test scores and 0.08 standard deviations in student reading scores. This same reduction in lead poisoning narrowed both the white-Hispanic math achievement gap and white-Hispanic reading achievement gap by 0.06 standard deviations, implying important downstream consequences for economic inequality.
- Published
- 2018
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26. Outcomes of a Weight Loss Intervention to Prevent Diabetes Among Low-Income Residents of East Harlem, New York
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Emily A. Hanlen-Rosado, Kate Lorig, Victoria Mayer, Kezhen Fei, Carol R. Horowitz, Guedy Arniella, Rennie Negron, Nita Vangeepuram, and Ashley M. Fox
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Community-Based Participatory Research ,Diabetes risk ,Population ,Psychological intervention ,Overweight ,Peer Group ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Weight loss ,Poverty Areas ,Weight Loss ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Health Education ,education.field_of_study ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Health Status Disparities ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,chemistry ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Female ,New York City ,Glycated hemoglobin ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Demography ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
There is a need for diabetes prevention efforts targeting vulnerable populations. Our community–academic partnership, the East Harlem Partnership for Diabetes Prevention, conducted a randomized controlled trial to study the impact of peer led diabetes prevention workshops on weight and diabetes risk among an economically and racially diverse population in East Harlem, New York. We recruited overweight/obese adults from more than 50 community sites and conducted oral glucose tolerance testing and completed other clinical assessments and a health and lifestyle survey. We randomized prediabetic participants to intervention or delayed intervention groups. Intervention participants attended eight 90-minute peer-led workshop sessions at community sites. Participants in both groups returned for follow-up assessments 6 months after randomization. The main outcomes were the proportion of participants who achieved 5% weight loss, percentage weight loss, and change in the probability of developing diabetes over the next 7.5 years according to the San Antonio Diabetes Prediction Model. We enrolled 402 participants who were mainly female (85%), Latino (73%) or Black (23%), foreign born (64%), and non-English speaking (58%). At 6 months, the intervention group lost a greater percentage of their baseline weight, had significantly lower rise in HbA1c (glycated hemoglobin), decreased risk of diabetes, larger decreases in fat and fiber intake, improved confidence in nutrition label reading, and decrease in sedentary behavior as compared with the control group. Thus, in partnership with community stakeholders, we created an effective low-resource program that was less intensive than previously studied programs by incorporating strategies to engage and affect our priority population.
- Published
- 2019
27. Brain Region Specific Single-Molecule Fluorescence Imaging
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Brandon J. Henderson, Alicia J. Avelar, Aaron A Snell, Ashley M. Fox-Loe, Christopher I. Richards, Xu Fu, Deann M. Hopkins, James R. Pauly, and Faruk H. Moonschi
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Nicotine ,Chemistry ,Extramural ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Cell Membrane ,Brain ,Receptors, Nicotinic ,010402 general chemistry ,Single-molecule experiment ,01 natural sciences ,Single Molecule Imaging ,Fluorescence ,Article ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Brain region ,Mice ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Biophysics ,Animals ,Nicotinic Agonists - Abstract
We developed an approach utilizing nanoscale vesicles extracted from brain regions combined with single molecule imaging to monitor how an animal’s physiological condition regulates the dynamics of protein distributions in different brain regions. This method was used to determine the effect of nicotine on the distribution of receptor stoichiometry in different mouse brain regions. Nicotine induced upregulation of α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) is associated with changes in their expression, trafficking, and stoichiometry. The structural assembly of nAChRs has been quantified in cell culture based systems using single molecule techniques. However, these methods are not capable of quantifying biomolecule assembly that takes place in a live animal. Both nicotine induced upregulation and changes in nAChR stoichiometry differ across brain regions. Our single molecule approach revealed that nicotine acts differentially across brain regions to alter assembly in response to exposure and withdrawal.
- Published
- 2019
28. What is driving global obesity trends? Globalization or 'modernization'?
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Victor Asal, Wenhui Feng, and Ashley M. Fox
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Internationality ,Women’s empowerment ,Developing country ,Global Health ,Economic globalization ,Modernization theory ,03 medical and health sciences ,Globalization ,0302 clinical medicine ,Women's empowerment ,Urbanization ,Per capita ,Humans ,Obesity ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Social Change ,Body mass index ,Research ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Cultural globalization ,Nutrition transition ,Demographic economics ,Economic Development ,0305 other medical science - Abstract
Background Worldwide obesity has more than doubled since 1980. Researchers have attributed rising obesity rates to factors related to globalization processes, which are believed to contribute to obesity by flooding low-income country markets with inexpensive but obesogenic foods and diffusing Western-style fast food outlets (dependency/world systems theory). However, alternative explanations include domestic factors such as increases in unhealthy food consumption in response to rising income and higher women’s labor force participation as countries develop economically (“modernization” theory). To what extent are processes of globalization driving rising global overweight/obesity rates versus domestic economic and social development processes? This study evaluates the influence of economic globalization versus economic development and associated processes on global weight gain. Results Using two-way fixed-effects OLS regression with a panel dataset of mean body weight for 190-countries over a 30-year period (1980–2008), we find that domestic factors associated with “modernization” including increasing GDP per capita, urbanization and women’s empowerment were associated with increases in mean BMI over time. There was also evidence of a curvilinear relationship between GDP per capita and BMI: among low income countries, economic growth predicted increases in BMI whereas among high-income countries, higher GDP predicted lower BMI. By contrast, economic globalization (dependency/world systems theory) did not significantly predict increases in mean BMI and cultural globalization had mixed effects. These results were robust to different model specifications, imputation approaches and variable transformations. Discussion Global increases in overweight/obesity appear to be driven more by domestic processes including economic development, urbanization and women’s empowerment, and are less clearly negatively impacted by external globalization processes suggesting that the harms to health from global trade regimes may be overstated. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12992-019-0457-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2019
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29. Sociodemographic Characteristics and Inequities Associated With Access to In-Person and Remote Elementary Schooling During the COVID-19 Pandemic in New York State
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Erika G. Martin, Ashley M. Fox, Jun Soo Lee, and Lucy C. Sorensen
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Male ,endocrine system ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,genetic structures ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Physical Distancing ,New York ,Ethnic group ,Child Welfare ,Education, Distance ,State (polity) ,Residence Characteristics ,Social Justice ,Environmental health ,Pandemic ,Ethnicity ,Research Letter ,Humans ,Sociology ,Child ,Pandemics ,Poverty ,Health policy ,media_common ,Schools ,Research ,Health Policy ,Racial Groups ,COVID-19 ,Homeopathy ,General Medicine ,Social justice ,Disabled Children ,Online Only ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Female - Abstract
This cross-sectional study compares in-person school reopening decisions by student sociodemographic characteristics among elementary schools in New York State.
- Published
- 2021
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30. Stress eating and sleep disturbance as mediators in the relationship between depression and obesity in low-income, minority women
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Ashley M. Fox, Jessica Yu, Rennie Negron, Kezhen Fei, and Carol R. Horowitz
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Adult ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mediation (statistics) ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Type 2 diabetes ,Article ,Eating ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Weight loss ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Poverty ,Minority Groups ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Depressive Disorder ,Sleep disorder ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Depression ,business.industry ,Feeding Behavior ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychosocial ,Stress, Psychological ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore potential mediators of the relationship between depression and obesity in a sample of low-income, minority women. Data were extracted from a sample of 535 women enrolled in a weight loss intervention for the prevention of type 2 diabetes. Using a non-parametric bootstrapping procedure, the potential mediation effects of stress eating and sleep disturbance on the relationship between depression and obesity were tested. Results of a single mediation model indicated that depressive symptomatology was significantly associated with obesity (β = 0.800, SE = 0.290, p = 0.006), and that stress eating (β = 0.166, 95% CI [0.046, 0.328]) and sleep disturbance (β = 1.032, 95% CI [0.612, 1.427]) were significant independent mediators of this relationship. Sleep disturbance remained a significant mediator in a combined mediation model (β = 1.009, 95% CI [0.653, 1.399]). Findings add to the growing literature on the psychosocial factors implicated in the link between depression and obesity, particularly among disadvantaged populations. Future longitudinal research should aim to establish causal pathways between obesity, stress eating, sleep disturbance, and depression.
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- 2016
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31. Funding for Abstinence-Only Education and Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention: Does State Ideology Affect Outcomes?
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Hina Khalid, Elizabeth A. Howell, Ashley M. Fox, and Georgia Himmelstein
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Human sexuality ,Sex Education ,Affect (psychology) ,03 medical and health sciences ,State (polity) ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common ,Sexual Abstinence ,030505 public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Abstinence ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Sexual abstinence ,Family Planning Services ,Pregnancy in Adolescence ,Female ,Ideology ,AJPH Editorials ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Pregnancy prevention ,Forecasting - Abstract
Objectives. To examine the relationship between adolescent pregnancy–prevention and sexuality and abstinence-only education funding and adolescent birthrates over time. Also, to determine whether state ideology plays a moderating role on adolescent reproductive health, that is, whether the funding has its intended effect at reducing the number of adolescent births in conservative but not in liberal states. Methods. We modeled time-series data on federal abstinence-only and adolescent pregnancy–prevention and sexuality education block grants to US states and rates of adolescent births (1998–2016) and adjusted for state-level confounders using 2-way fixed-effects models. Results. Federal abstinence-only funding had no effect on adolescent birthrates overall but displayed a perverse effect, increasing adolescent birthrates in conservative states. Adolescent pregnancy–prevention and sexuality education funding eclipsed this effect, reducing adolescent birthrates in those states. Conclusions. The millions of dollars spent on abstinence-only education has had no effect on adolescent birthrates, although conservative states, which experience the greatest burden of adolescent births, are the most responsive to changes in sexuality education–funding streams.
- Published
- 2019
32. Public and Private Sector Health Facilities: Who Possesses National Health Guidelines?
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Hina Khalid and Ashley M. Fox
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Government ,Communicable disease ,Health facility ,business.industry ,Family planning ,Family medicine ,Public health ,Health care ,medicine ,Declaration ,business ,Private sector - Abstract
Background: Health guidelines help in ensuring uniformity in quality of care for clients, yet little attention has been giving to understanding if health facilities in the public or private sector are more likely to possess national health guidelines. We hypothesize that government health facilities in low and middle income countries are more likely to possess national guidelines as they are required to comply with public regulations, and are closer to organizations that communicate these guidelines. Methods: We use cross-sectional data from the DHS-SPA surveys to understand the relationship between the managing authority of a health facility (public versus private) and if the facility reports the presence of national health guidelines for maternal and child health (MNCH), communicable, and non-communicable diseases. We restrict our sample to several African and South Asian countries. Findings: We find that health facilities managed by a public authority are more likely to possess guidelines for MNCH, and communicable diseases, as compared to privately managed health facilities. In terms of MNCH healthcare guidelines, the odds of reporting the presence of national guidelines for family planning, IMPAC, CEmOC, and PMTCT, are 57%, 42.4%, 72.2%, and 60.2% higher respectively among public health facilities. For communicable disease guidelines, the odds of reporting the presence of national guidelines for malaria, tuberculosis, and STIs are 103%, 121%, and 81% higher respectively among public health facilities. Interpretation: Our findings suggest that inspite of criticisms, public health facilities have comparative strength in possessing guidelines. Our findings imply a need to improve health system regulation. Funding Statement: The authors stated that they did not receive funding for this work. Declaration of Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare. Ethics Approval Statement: The study uses publicly available, secondary data and so an IRB application was not filed.
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- 2019
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33. Effectiveness of Social Skills Interventions Incorporating Peer Interactions for Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A Systematic Review
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Claudia Hilton, Karen Ratcliff, Mary Valicek, Stephanie Dishman, and Ashley M. Fox
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Occupational therapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education ,Psychological intervention ,Peer group ,medicine.disease ,Social engagement ,Peer Group ,Social Skills ,Systematic review ,Occupational Therapy ,Social skills ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ,Interpersonal Relations ,Child ,Social Behavior ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Social behavior - Abstract
Importance: Few studies examining the use of peers during interventions have been published, and no systematic review has been conducted to evaluate the available literature. Objective: To examine the effectiveness of social skills interventions incorporating peers for children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) to improve social interactions. Data Sources: A search of five databases (CINAHL, PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and PsycINFO) produced 697 articles. Sixty-one were retrieved for full-text review, and 15 articles met inclusion criteria. Study Selection and Data Collection: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines were used to abstract data. Inclusion criteria: Participants younger than age 18 yr with any ADHD pattern, social skills interventions with peer involvement, outcome measures within the domain of occupational therapy, written in English, and involved a peer as the sole or primary component at some point in the social skills intervention. Exclusion criteria: Studies older than 20 yr or that used participants with comorbidities or multiple conditions. Findings: Interventions incorporating both peer categories were effective for increasing play skills, reducing undesirable social behaviors (e.g., inappropriate verbalizations, dominant behaviors, aggression), and improving communication (e.g., pragmatic language, collaboration, joint participation) and social participation. Improvements were maintained over time, as evidenced by follow-up studies. Conclusions and Relevance: Outcomes of these studies demonstrate moderate evidence that supports the use of social skills interventions incorporating peers for children with ADHD to improve social interactions, supporting their use by occupational therapists and the need for more studies. What This Article Adds: This article provides guidance to occupational therapy practitioners on social skills intervention options for children with ADHD.
- Published
- 2020
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34. 10 Breastfeeding Promotion: Politics and Policy
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Ashley M. Fox
- Subjects
Politics ,Economic growth ,Breastfeeding promotion ,Political science - Published
- 2018
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35. 10 Stillförderung: politische Konzepte und Strategien
- Author
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Ashley M. Fox
- Published
- 2018
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36. Political Economy of Nutrition Policy in Senegal
- Author
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Ashley M. Fox
- Subjects
Government ,Food security ,Social protection ,Agricultural diversification ,Political economy ,Public policy ,International community ,Urban bias ,Business ,Private sector - Abstract
Senegal has a reputation for having one of the most effective and far-reaching nutritionservice delivery systems in Africa. Chronic malnutrition has dropped to less than 20 percent, oneof the lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa. The reduction in stunting in particular has been deemed a success in Senegal with the prevalence of child stunting one of the lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa in absolute terms (Nene 2017). This success has at least in part been attributed to broad-based government commitment to nutrition, which has grown from US$0.3 million per year in 2002 to US$5.7 million per year in 2015, increasing from approximately 0.02 percent to 0.12 percent of the national budget. Yet concerns remain regarding whether the level of government support for nutrition is sufficient and the degree to which nutrition has been as effectively “mainstreamed” across major line ministries, such as agriculture, education, water and sanitation, socialprotection and health, to support both nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions. Moreover, the nutrition field as a whole is characterized by a myriad of actors (international donors, NGOs, and technical support agencies) whose interventions are not well coordinated, leading to duplications of effort and inefficiencies in the provision of services. A series ofexternal shocks, including food shortages stemming from drought, the global financial crisis, and the instability of prices for local foodstuffs since 2007, has revealed the continued need for additional investment in nutrition and better intersectoral coordination of activities to counter cyclical attention to nutrition and a predominant focus on food insufficiency rather than abroader focus on nutrition. To this end, the government of Senegal, through the CLM, is in the process of drafting the new PSMN to develop a reform agenda for the sector. The PSMN will lay out a framework and timeline for the development of a nutrition financing strategy that will requirespecific analysis of the sector spending and financial basis, linking it to the coverage and quality of nutrition services and assessing the contribution of different sectors and actors to the budget. As part of the Analysis & Perspective: 15 Years of Experience in the Development of Nutrition Policy in Senegal series, the World Bank commissioned this report to elaborate the specific political challenges to and opportunities for further raising the profile ofnutrition on the government’s agenda and secure a sustainable effort to reduce maternal and child malnutrition. The nutrition agenda is often prone to political economy challenges when it competes for government support, as the impact of nutritional intervention is neither immediate nor tangible. Though the benefits of proper nutrition are life-long and are foundational to proper growth and development, nutrition can fall by the wayside in policymakers’ inevitably shorter-termoutlook. With this in mind, the objective of this report was to identify the policy and political levers that can be used to foster government leadership and galvanize intersectoral coordination that mainstreams nutrition into government policies and programs and effectively, efficiently, and sustainably delivers nutrition interventions in Senegal.
- Published
- 2018
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37. The Nicotine Metabolite, Cotinine, Alters the Assembly and Trafficking of a Subset of Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors
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Christopher I. Richards, Faruk H. Moonschi, and Ashley M. Fox
- Subjects
Nicotine ,Metabolite ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Receptors, Nicotinic ,Pharmacology ,complex mixtures ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cell surface receptor ,Cell Line, Tumor ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Cotinine ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Acetylcholine receptor ,Cell Membrane ,Cell Differentiation ,Tobacco Use Disorder ,Cell Biology ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Up-Regulation ,Protein Subunits ,Protein Transport ,HEK293 Cells ,Nicotinic agonist ,nervous system ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,chemistry ,sense organs ,Molecular Biophysics ,Intracellular ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Exposure to nicotine alters the trafficking and assembly of nicotinic receptors (nAChRs), leading to their up-regulation on the plasma membrane. Although the mechanism is not fully understood, nicotine-induced up-regulation is believed to contribute to nicotine addiction. The effect of cotinine, the primary metabolite of nicotine, on nAChR trafficking and assembly has not been extensively investigated. We utilize a pH-sensitive variant of GFP, super ecliptic pHluorin, to differentiate between intracellular nAChRs and those expressed on the plasma membrane to quantify changes resulting from cotinine and nicotine exposure. Similar to nicotine, exposure to cotinine increases the number of α4β2 receptors on the plasma membrane and causes a redistribution of intracellular receptors. In contrast to this, cotinine exposure down-regulates α6β2β3 receptors. We also used single molecule fluorescence studies to show that cotinine and nicotine both alter the assembly of α4β2 receptors to favor the high sensitivity (α4)2(β2)3 stoichiometry.
- Published
- 2015
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38. Mammalian Cell-derived Vesicles for the Isolation of Organelle Specific Transmembrane Proteins to Conduct Single Molecule Studies
- Author
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Christopher I. Richards, Faruk H. Moonschi, Xu Fu, and Ashley M. Fox-Loe
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0301 basic medicine ,010405 organic chemistry ,Strategy and Management ,Mechanical Engineering ,Vesicle ,HEK 293 cells ,Metals and Alloys ,01 natural sciences ,Single Molecule Imaging ,Article ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Transmembrane protein ,0104 chemical sciences ,Blot ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Membrane ,Organelle ,Biophysics ,Receptor - Abstract
Cell-derived vesicles facilitate the isolation of transmembrane proteins in their physiological membrane maintaining their structural and functional integrity. These vesicles can be generated from different cellular organelles producing, housing, or transporting the proteins. Combined with single-molecule imaging, isolated organelle specific vesicles can be employed to study the trafficking and assembly of the embedded proteins. Here we present a method for organelle specific single molecule imaging via isolation of ER and plasma membrane vesicles from HEK293T cells by employing OptiPrep gradients and nitrogen cavitation. The isolation was validated through Western blotting, and the isolated vesicles were used to perform single molecule studies of oligomeric receptor assembly.
- Published
- 2018
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39. Decentralizing for a Deeper, More Supple Democracy
- Author
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Jean-Paul Faguet, Ashley M. Fox, and Caroline Pöschl
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public administration ,JA Political science (General) ,Decentralization ,Complementarity (physics) ,Democracy ,Economies of scale ,Politics ,State (polity) ,Accountability ,Economics ,Legitimacy ,media_common - Abstract
Well-designed decentralization can deepen democracy and strengthen the state in five key ways. Decentralizing below the level of social cleavages should undermine secessionism by peeling away moderates from radical leaders. The “fragmentation of authority” critique is mistaken; decentralization transforms the state from a simpler, brittler command structure to one of multilevel complementarity more robust to local failure. Decentralizing services with low economies of scale, with devolved taxation and bail-outs prohibited, should increase accountability. Lastly, the small scale of local politics allows citizens to become political actors, promoting social learning-by-doing, strengthening political legitimacy and ‘democratic suppleness’ from the grass-roots upwards.
- Published
- 2015
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40. Utilizing pHluorin-tagged Receptors to Monitor Subcellular Localization and Trafficking
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Ashley M. Fox-Loe, Brandon J. Henderson, and Christopher I. Richards
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,General Chemical Engineering ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Intracellular Space ,Biophysics ,Golgi Apparatus ,Biology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell membrane ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Extracellular ,Animals ,Transport Vesicles ,Luminescent Agents ,Total internal reflection fluorescence microscope ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Vesicle ,General Neuroscience ,Cell Membrane ,Membrane Proteins ,Subcellular localization ,Transport protein ,Cell biology ,Protein Transport ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Membrane protein ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Understanding membrane protein trafficking, assembly, and expression requires an approach that differentiates between those residing in intracellular organelles and those localized on the plasma membrane. Traditional fluorescence-based measurements lack the capability to distinguish membrane proteins residing in different organelles. Cutting edge methodologies transcend traditional methods by coupling pH-sensitive fluorophores with total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM). TIRF illumination excites the sample up to approximately 150 nm from the glass-sample interface, thus decreasing background, increasing the signal to noise ratio, and enhancing resolution. The excitation volume in TIRFM encompasses the plasma membrane and nearby organelles such as the peripheral ER. Superecliptic pHluorin (SEP) is a pH sensitive version of GFP. Genetically encoding SEP into the extracellular domain of a membrane protein of interest positions the fluorophore on the luminal side of the ER and in the extracellular region of the cell. SEP is fluorescent when the pH is greater than 6, but remains in an off state at lower pH values. Therefore, receptors tagged with SEP fluoresce when residing in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) or upon insertion in the plasma membrane (PM) but not when confined to a trafficking vesicle or other organelles such as the Golgi. The extracellular pH can be adjusted to dictate the fluorescence of receptors on the plasma membrane. The difference in fluorescence between TIRF images at neutral and acidic extracellular pH for the same cell corresponds to a relative number of receptors on the plasma membrane. This allows a simultaneous measurement of intracellular and plasma membrane resident receptors. Single vesicle insertion events can also be measured when the extracellular pH is neutral, corresponding to a low pH trafficking vesicle fusing with the plasma membrane and transitioning into a fluorescent state. This versatile technique can be exploited to study localization, expression, and trafficking of membrane proteins.
- Published
- 2017
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41. Measuring political commitment and opportunities to advance food and nutrition security: piloting a rapid assessment tool
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Michael R. Reich, Chloe Cheng, Yarlini Balarajan, and Ashley M. Fox
- Subjects
Community cohesion ,Economic growth ,Nutrition Interventions ,Health Policy ,Malnutrition ,Politics ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Administrative Personnel ,medicine.disease ,Food Supply ,Nutrition Policy ,Rapid assessment ,Cohesion (linguistics) ,Health Planning ,medicine ,Humans ,National Policy ,Business ,Marketing ,Developing Countries ,Needs Assessment ,Disease burden - Abstract
Lack of political commitment has been identified as a primary reason for the low priority that food and nutrition interventions receive from national governments relative to the high disease burden caused by malnutrition. Researchers have identified a number of factors that contribute to food and nutrition's 'low-priority cycle' on national policy agendas, but few tools exist to rapidly measure political commitment and identify opportunities to advance food and nutrition on the policy agenda. This article presents a theory-based rapid assessment approach to gauging countries' level of political commitment to food and nutrition security and identifying opportunities to advance food and nutrition on the policy agenda. The rapid assessment tool was piloted among food and nutrition policymakers and planners in 10 low- and middle-income countries in April to June 2013. Food and nutrition commitment and policy opportunity scores were calculated for each country and strategies to advance food and nutrition on policy agendas were designed for each country. The article finds that, in a majority of countries, political leaders had verbally and symbolically committed to addressing food and nutrition, but adequate financial resources were not allocated to implement specific programmes. In addition, whereas the low cohesion of the policy community has been viewed a major underlying cause of the low-priority status of food and nutrition, the analysis finds that policy community cohesion and having a well thought-out policy alternative were present in most countries. This tool may be useful to policymakers and planners providing information that can be used to benchmark and/or evaluate advocacy efforts to advance reforms in the food and nutrition sector; furthermore, the results can help identify specific strategies that can be employed to move the food and nutrition agenda forward. This tool complements others that have been recently developed to measure national commitment to advancing food and nutrition security.
- Published
- 2014
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42. 2262 Is less more? Examining the relationship between food assistance generosity and childhood obesity
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Megan Reynolds, Michael W. Varner, Melanie Beagley, Ming Wen, Ashley M. Fox, and Ken R. Smith
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Generosity ,Longitudinal study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Medicine ,Fixed effects model ,Overweight ,medicine.disease ,Childhood obesity ,Odds ,Science and Health Policy/Ethics/Health Impacts/Outcomes Research ,Panel Study of Income Dynamics ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Underweight ,Psychology ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: In combination with 3 waves of individual-level data on children age 5–18 from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we exploit exogenous variation at the level of the state to determine whether SNAP generosity modifies the effect of SNAP participation on overweight/obesity status. We do so using a newly created and powerful data set including information on state-level SNAP generosity between the years 1996 to 2011. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Data and sample. We drew individual-level data from the Child Development Supplements of the Panel of Income Dynamics (PSID), a nationally representative longitudinal study gathering data since 1968 on US individuals and the families in which they reside. Aged 0–12 years in 1997, these children of PSID sample members were surveyed roughly every 5 years through 2007. The total number of observations over the study period is just over 8093, representing 3563 children. We drew state-level data from the State Welfare Generosity Index. This is a decomposable index of State welfare generosity capturing state policy variation across 4 programs (TANF, SNAP, Unemployment Insurance and Medicaid/CHIP) and 2 dimensions (eligibility requirements and benefit levels). Measures. Child weight status was determined using the Center for Disease Control (CDC) body mass index (BMI)-for-age gender-specific growth charts: underweight (BMI 5th percentile and BMI 85th percentile and BMI 95th percentile). From this, we constructed an indicator for overweight/obese Versus normal or underweight status. SNAP participation is a dichotomous indicator based on the head-of-households or their spouses reported receipt of SNAP benefits during the previous calendar year from the interview. SNAP generosity is scored on a scale of 0–100, with more generous states receiving higher scores than less generous states. Covariates include sex, race, age, head-of-household years of education and a continuous measure of household income adjusted for family size. Estimation techniques. We merged the child, parent/caregiver, family and main PSID files to obtain the most comprehensive data on each sample child. We first generated, descriptive statistics for the Wave 1 sample of 3563 children. We then present the mean, standard deviation and the ratio of the 2 (coefficient of variation) for state-level variables. We present χ2 tests of difference for non-SNAP compared to SNAP participants in terms of overweight/obesity, and pairwise correlation coefficients among the 3 state-level variables. Next, we conducted a series of simple and multivariate logistic regressions estimating the odds of being overweight or obese. As we are assessing the risk of adverse weight status, those of normal or underweight status are the reference group for all regression analysis. Because height and weight reports are known to be unreliable below the age of 5, regression analyses impose an age restriction of greater than 5 years old. We include adjustment for the clustered nature of data. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: The individual-level statistics indicate that roughly one-third of the CDS sample is overweight or obese at Wave I in 1997. About a fifth of them live in families receiving SNAP. The mean SNAP generosity score is 10 on a possible range of 0 to 1 (observed range of 0.037 to 0.290 not shown). Variation across state-years is greatest for the SNAP participation variable, as reflected by the coefficient of variation. In the period 1997–2007, the proportion of children who are overweight or obese is 5% higher among those in families receiving SNAP program benefits than among those in families not receiving SNAP benefits. Similarly, SNAP participation is positively, moderately and significantly (with an α of 0.05) correlated with overweight/obesity. Examines the relationship between overweight/obesity and the SNAP measures using individual-level data on overweight/obesity and SNAP participation and state-level data on SNAP generosity. Model 1 estimates and exponentiates the log odds of overweight/obesity based on individual-level SNAP participation. Model 2 does the same using state-level SNAP generosity as the predictor. Results indicate that both variables are positively associated with a child’s chance of being overweight/obese. But only in the case of SNAP participation is the SNAP variable statistically significant. Children living in families receiving SNAP benefits are more likely to be overweight/obese by a factor of 1.23. A set of potential confounders to the analysis and tests for interaction effects between SNAP participation and SNAP generosity (Model 3). Controlling for a variety of demographic and socio-economic factors, the positive effect of SNAP participation on overweight/obesity is rendered negative. The nonsignificant effect of SNAP generosity remains. In Model 3, the interaction effect for SNAP participation and generosity is positive and marginally significant. This suggests that the generosity of benefits changes the basic relationship between SNAP participation and overweight/obesity among children in families receiving benefits. To help convey the meaning of this coefficient, we generated marginal effects of SNAP participation based on SNAP generosity, setting all covariates equal to their means. This figure shows a small negative effect of SNAP participation at the lowest levels of generosity (a score of around 4, the sample minimum). This negative effect crosses 0 at a score of around 12, then becomes positive. The magnitude of the positive effect grows up to the sample max (index=28), although with widening confidence intervals. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: The focal interest of this study lies in the potential interaction effect between SNAP generosity and SNAP participation on overweight/obesity. Although the effects were only marginally significant, we find that SNAP generosity does interact with SNAP participation. More specifically, the effects of SNAP participation appear negative at lower levels of generosity, becoming positive as generosity scores exceed the sample mean (index=10). In other words, state-level SNAP generosity appears to exacerbate the adverse effects of SNAP participation on overweight/obesity. Although we submit that our current findings contribute to the literature on the SNAP-health link, we intend to strengthen our analysis in several ways. First, we will fit models that exploit the strengths of the PSID and the welfare generosity index in terms of causal inference. We will use fixed effects models to control not only for potential unobserved confounders related to the child but also observable baseline characteristics. Leveraging the fact that PSID samples up to 2 children from each family, we will further refine our estimates towards a causal interpretation with the use of sibling fixed effects, in which we additional account for unmeasured time-invariant family-level variables that encapsulate a variety of factors including learned behaviors, cultural influences, genetic predispositions that contribute to child health outcomes. Second, research has clearly shown that compared with higher-SES individuals, lower-SES individuals have higher BMI regardless of welfare program participation. These selection effects are addressed somewhat by the PSID’s intentional over-representation of low-income individuals. But we can much more convincingly address these potential problems with endogeneity by refining our analyses to compare SNAP participants to SNAP-eligible nonparticipants, thereby isolating the effect of the SNAP “treatment.” Lastly, we intend to include a wide array of state-level covariates that may be related to our independent and dependent variables of interest, such as poverty rate, unemployment rate, and racial/ethnic composition.
- Published
- 2018
43. Bringing the state back in: Understanding and validating measures of governments' political commitment to HIV
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Ashley M. Fox, Radhika Gore, Till Bärnighausen, and Allison B. Goldberg
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Index (economics) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developing country ,Federal Government ,HIV Infections ,Validation Studies as Topic ,Politics ,State (polity) ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Organizational Objectives ,Meaning (existential) ,Policy Making ,Developing Countries ,media_common ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Benchmarking ,Public relations ,medicine.disease ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,Psychology ,business ,Social psychology - Abstract
Analysis of the politics of HIV programme scale-up requires critical attention to the role of the state, since the state formulates HIV policies, provides resources for the HIV response and negotiates donor involvement in HIV programmes. However, conceptual and methodological approaches to analysing states' responses to HIV remain underdeveloped. Research suggests that differences in states' successes in HIV programme scale-up reflect their levels of 'political commitment' to responding to HIV. Few empirical measures of political commitment exist, and those that do, notably the AIDS Program Effort Index (API), employ ad hoc scoring approaches to combine information from different variables into an index of commitment. The indices are thus difficult to interpret and may not have empirically useful meaning. In this paper, we apply exploratory factor analysis to examine whether, and how, selected variables that comprise the API score reflect previously theorised dimensions of political commitment. We investigate how variables associated with each of the factors identified in the analyses correspond to these theorised dimensions as well as to API categories. Finally, we discuss potential uses--such as political benchmarking and accountability--and challenges of factor analysis as a means to identify and measure states' political commitment to respond to HIV.
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- 2014
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44. AIDS policy responsiveness in Africa: Evidence from opinion surveys
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Ashley M. Fox
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Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,Afrobarometer ,Economic growth ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Appeal ,Developing country ,Public opinion ,medicine.disease ,Politics ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Government ,Health Care Surveys ,Public Opinion ,Africa ,Odds Ratio ,Financial Support ,Humans ,Medicine ,Policy Making ,business ,Lagging ,Health policy - Abstract
As a result of massive scale-up efforts in developing countries, millions of people living with HIV are now receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, countries have been uneven in their scale-up efforts with ART coverage rates exceeding expectations in some places and lagging behind expectation in others. This paper develops a model that explains ART scale-up as a function of the responsiveness of political parties to their primary constituents. Specifically, the paper argues that, faced with a perilous 'threat to the nation', countries responded in one of two ways, both of which were designed to appeal to their primary constituents--either adopting a 'Geneva Consensus' response, or depicting the epidemic as a Western disease and adopting a 'pan-African' response. The article tests this theory using Afrobarometer data for eleven countries. The paper finds that HIV/AIDS is generally a non-partisan issue in most countries. However, the analysis does uncover some differences in partisan support for HIV/AIDS responses in both countries that have adopted Geneva Consensus and pan-African responses, though not in the direction hypothesised. The lack of congruence in policy preferences between the public and their governments suggests a democratic deficit in that these governments have acted independently of the preferences of core constituents.
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- 2014
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45. Marital Concurrency and HIV Risk in 16 African Countries
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Ashley M. Fox
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Adult ,Male ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,Sexual Behavior ,Culture ,Population ,Developing country ,HIV Infections ,Odds ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Marriage ,Socioeconomics ,education ,Health policy ,education.field_of_study ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,Health psychology ,Sexual Partners ,Infectious Diseases ,Circumcision, Male ,Africa ,Female ,Serostatus ,Psychology ,Biomarkers ,Demography - Abstract
Research has identified sexual concurrency as a potential underlying driver of high HIV infection levels in sub-Saharan Africa, though few studies have explicitly examined the contribution of marital concurrency. Utilizing a multi-level model of Demographic and Health Surveys with HIV-biomarkers for sixteen African countries, this study assessed the relationship between an individual's HIV serostatus and rates of formal and informal marital concurrency (% polygamous unions, % extramarital partner past year) among married men and women. Mutually exclusive regional-level variables were constructed and modeled to test the contextual risk posed by living in a region with higher levels of formal and informal marital concurrency controlling for individual sexual partnerships and other covariates. Compared with regions where monogamous unions were more prevalent, the odds of having HIV were higher among individuals living in regions with more informal marital concurrency, but lower in regions with more polygamy, even accounting for individual-level sexual behavior. These results can help inform prevention policy and practice in sub-Saharan Africa.
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- 2014
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46. Prospective political analysis for policy design: Enhancing the political viability of single-payer health reform in Vermont
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Nathan Blanchet and Ashley M. Fox
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Employment ,Economic growth ,Insurance, Health ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Corporate governance ,Politics ,Opposition (politics) ,Stakeholder ,Legislation ,Legislature ,Public administration ,Payroll ,Universal Health Insurance ,Health Care Reform ,Health care ,Healthcare Financing ,Humans ,Stakeholder analysis ,Business ,Policy Making ,Single-Payer System ,Vermont - Abstract
Background In 2011 the state of Vermont adopted legislation that aims to create the nation's first state-level single-payer health care system, a system that would go well beyond national reform efforts. Objectives To conduct a prospective, institutional stakeholder analysis to guide development of a politically viable, universal health care reform proposal, as commissioned by Vermont's legislature in July 2010. Methods A total of 64 semi-structured stakeholder interviews with nearly 120 individuals, representing 60 different groups/institutions, were conducted between July and December 2010. Interviews probed stakeholders regarding five major design components: financing options, decoupling insurance from employment, organization/governance, comprehensiveness of benefits, and payment reform. Results There was a range of opposition and support across stakeholder groups and components, and more remarkably a diversity of views within groups often believed to be unwavering supporters or detractors of comprehensive health reform. Given the balance of conflicting views, relative power, and acceptable trade-offs, the research team proposed a single-payer health care system financed through payroll taxes, decoupled from employment, with a generous benefit package, governed by a public–private intermediary. Conclusions Prospective political analysis can assist in choosing among a range of technically sound policy options to create a more politically viable health reform package.
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- 2013
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47. Screen time, physical activity and depression risk in minority women
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Jessica Y. Breland, Ashley M. Fox, and Carol R. Horowitz
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Gerontology ,Physical activity ,Overweight ,Logistic regression ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Article ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Screen time ,Mood ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Risk factor ,Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Demography - Abstract
Emerging research suggests that sedentary behavior, sometimes measured as screen time, may be an important correlate of depression. Physical activity, while not the direct opposite of sedentary behavior, has also been associated with depression (albeit inversely). Although low-income and minority populations may experience greater levels of depression, little research has focused on the relationships between screen time or physical activity and depression in low-income, minority populations in the United States. This study used logistic regression to assess relationships among depression, daily screen time, and weekly physical activity and the interaction between screen time and physical activity in a cross-sectional sample of 535 overweight or obese minority women in East Harlem, New York. Sixteen percent of participants were at risk for depression, which was significantly higher than national averages. Results suggested that engaging in high levels of daily screen time was associated with increased depression risk, even after controlling for physical activity and demographic variables. Neither physical activity nor the interaction between screen time and physical activity were associated with depression risk. Obesity was significantly associated with depression risk in all models, even when accounting for sedentary behavior and physical activity. Daily screen time may be an important risk factor for depression in minority women in the United States. The lack of association between physical activity and depression did not support past research and may have been due to the physical activity measure or the fact that physical activity may not be an important risk factor for depression in minority women.
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- 2013
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48. A high-throughput screening assay using a photoconvertable protein for identifying inhibitors of transcription, translation, or proteasomal degradation
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Ashley M. Fox, Edith C. Glazer, Christopher I. Richards, and David K. Heidary
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0301 basic medicine ,Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex ,Transcription, Genetic ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Genetic Vectors ,Protein degradation ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Analytical Chemistry ,Cell Line ,Bortezomib ,03 medical and health sciences ,NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha ,Transcription (biology) ,Genes, Reporter ,Fluorescence microscope ,Protein biosynthesis ,Humans ,Protein Synthesis Inhibitors ,010405 organic chemistry ,Fluorescence ,Molecular biology ,0104 chemical sciences ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,Luminescent Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,HEK293 Cells ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Cancer cell ,Proteolysis ,Molecular Medicine ,Classical pharmacology ,Proteasome Inhibitors ,Plate reader ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Dysregulated transcription, translation, and protein degradation are common features of cancer cells, regardless of specific genetic profiles. Several clinical anticancer agents take advantage of this characteristic vulnerability, and interfere with the processes of transcription and translation, or inhibit protein degradation. However, traditional assays that follow the process of protein production and removal require multi-step processing, and are not easily amenable to high-throughput screening (HTS). The use of recombinant fluorescent proteins provides a convenient solution to this problem, and moreover, photoconvertable fluorescent proteins allow for ratiometric detection of both new protein production and removal of existing proteins. Here, the photoconvertable protein Dendra2 is used in the development of in-cell assays of protein production and degradation that are optimized and validated for high-throughput screening. Conversion from the green to red emissive form can be achieved using a high intensity light emitting diode (LED) array, producing a stable pool of the red fluorescent form of Dendra2. This allows for rates of protein production or removal to be quantified in a plate reader or by fluorescence microscopy, providing a means to measure the potencies of inhibitors that affect these key processes.
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- 2017
49. Best Practices in Policy Approaches to Obesity Prevention
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Ashley M. Fox and Carol R. Horowitz
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Freedom ,Obesity prevention ,Public economics ,Health Policy ,Best practice ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Equity (finance) ,Article ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Paternalism ,Action (philosophy) ,Political science ,Humans ,Obesity ,Socioeconomics ,Set (psychology) ,Health policy - Abstract
The rapidly rising rate of obesity has prompted a variety of policy responses at national, regional, and local levels. Yet, many have expressed concern that these policy responses have a limited evidence base, are overly paternalistic, and have the potential to increase rather than shrink obesity-related disparities. The purpose of this article is to evaluate obesity policies in terms of the adequacy of evidence for action and along two ethical dimensions: their potential effect on liberty and equity. To evaluate evidence, we engage in a systematic review of reviews and rate policies in terms of the sufficiency of evidence of effectiveness at combating obesity. We then apply a libertarian-paternalist framework to assess policies in terms of their impact on liberty and inverse-equity theory to assess impact on disparities. This article provides a framework to assist decision-makers in assessing best practices in obesity using a more multi-faceted set of dimensions.
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- 2013
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50. Are Parental Perceptions of Child Activity Levels and Overall Health More Important than Perceptions of Weight?
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Kezhen Fei, Maida P. Galvez, Lawrence C. Kleinman, Carol R. Horowitz, Nita Vangeepuram, Ashley M. Fox, and Michelle A. Ramos
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Adult ,Male ,Parents ,Rural Population ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Community-Based Participatory Research ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Diabetes risk ,Georgia ,Epidemiology ,Ethnic group ,Weight Perception ,Overweight ,Article ,Body Mass Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Obesity ,Child ,Exercise ,Life Style ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Hispanic or Latino ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Physical activity level ,Diet ,Black or African American ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Perception ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Demography - Abstract
Objectives To examine relationships between parental perceptions of child weight and overall health, reported lifestyle behaviors and measured body mass index (BMI). Methods Using community-partnered methods, we surveyed families residing in a two census tract area identified for targeted interventions to decrease diabetes related disparities. The survey included demographics, child dietary and physical activity behaviors, and parental perception of child's health and weight. We measured child BMI using a standardized protocol. Results We surveyed parents of 116 children with a mean age of 7 years (range 3-15) with 51 % boys, 74 % Hispanic, and 26 % Black. Over half of the children (55 %) were overweight or obese. Half (50 %) of the parents underestimated their children's weight. Reported daily hours of walking and/or running trended higher (3.6 vs. 2.6 h, p = 0.08) for children perceived to be of normal weight. Parents who correctly estimated their child's weight status reported more hours of daily walking/running than parents who underestimated child weight status, 4.5 versus 2.4 h, p = 0.0002. Parents of healthy weight children were more likely to report that children were in excellent or very good health compared to parents of overweight/obese children, 75 versus 56 % respectively (p = 0.04). We found significant racial/ethnic differences in reported diet and physical activity behaviors and perception of overall health. Conclusions for Practice Parental perceptions of child health and physical activity level may be related to perceptions of their child's weight status. Study findings informed community-based initiatives for reducing diabetes risk among children.
- Published
- 2016
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