11 results on '"Oliffe, John L"'
Search Results
2. Tobacco and the invention of quitting: a history of gender, excess and will-power.
- Author
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White, Cameron, Oliffe, John L., and Bottorff, Joan L.
- Subjects
- *
SMOKING cessation , *DRUG addiction , *PUBLIC health , *SELF-efficacy , *SEX distribution , *TOBACCO , *DRUG control , *HISTORY - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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3. Masculinity, Race, and Style in the Consumption of Cigarettes, 1962-1972.
- Author
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White, Cameron, Oliffe, John L., and Bottorff, Joan L.
- Subjects
- *
PERSONAL beauty & race , *SMOKING , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *BLACK people , *BODY image , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *GENDER identity , *GROUP identity , *MEN , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *WHITE people , *ADVERTISING , *HISTORY of advertising - Abstract
In the United States, analysis of survey data provided by projects such as the National Health Interview Survey and the Youth Tobacco Survey has revealed the extent to which cigarette consumption patterns are influenced by gender and race. Taking our lead from a broader field of research that analyzed the sociological characteristics of cigarette consumption, we analyzed these intersections between race and gender through a study of masculinity and style in Marlboro and Kool cigarette advertisements during the 1960s and 1970s. We focused on this period because it was then that the racial bifurcation of cigarette consumption practices first became apparent. We suggest that style provides both a theoretical framework and methodology for understanding how and why White American and African American male consumers learned to consume in different ways. We also argue that the analysis of tobacco consumption in terms of masculinity and style provides a useful method for approaching the design of antismoking interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. An Evaluation of 5-Year Web Analytics for HeadsUpGuys: A Men's Depression E-Mental Health Resource.
- Author
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Ogrodniczuk JS, Beharry J, and Oliffe JL
- Subjects
- Canada, Health Resources, Humans, Male, Men's Health, United States, Depression epidemiology, Telemedicine
- Abstract
The present study reports an evaluation of web analytics, over a 5-year period, for HeadsUpGuys.org, an eHealth resource for men with depression. Google Analytics, Search Console, and Tag Manager were used to monitor user activity over the course of the website's first 5 years (June 15, 2015-June 15, 2020). Through this period, HeadsUpGuys had a total of 1,665,356 unique users, amounting to 1,948,481 sessions and 3,328,258 page views. Organic traffic accounted for the highest proportion (53.44%; n = 1,041,277) of website sessions. Four of the top 10 Google search queries that brought users to the website related to suicidality. Three countries (United States, United Kingdom, Canada) accounted for almost three-quarters (71.10%; n = 1,385,485) of the site's traffic. Nearly three-quarters (73.35%; n = 1,429,285) of sessions occurred on a mobile device. The goal conversion rate for the Self Check was 60.27%. The average time on page was 2 min 53 s, with a bounce rate of 65.92%, and an exit rate of 57.20%. The goal conversion rate for the Stress Test was 52.89%. The average time on page was 4 min 8 s, with a bounce rate of 72.40% and an exit rate of 48.88%. The conversion rate for the final goal was 11.53%, indicating that approximately one in 10 visitors to the site had a session of at least 3 min. The findings illustrate the potential of eHealth resources to support men's mental health and provide a real-world benchmark to help advance the men's eHealth field.
- Published
- 2021
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5. HPV Vaccine and College-Age Men: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Laserson AK, Oliffe JL, Krist J, and Kelly MT
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Men, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, United States, Universities, Young Adult, Papillomavirus Infections prevention & control, Papillomavirus Vaccines
- Abstract
The human papillomavirus (HPV) potentially affects every sexually active man in the United States and Canada. In 2017, the vaccine became publicly funded in Canada for males ages 9-26, and was integrated into school vaccination programs. In 2019, HPV vaccination was recommended as routine for all U.S.-based males and females ages 9 through 26, and a shared decision for adults >26 years; however, since the approval of the vaccine in 2006 for females only, the age and dosing recommendations for males have followed a complicated and changing trajectory. Current adherence rates are low among college and university age males (18-26 years); therefore, understanding and addressing the barriers and facilitators for men's HPV vaccination is critically important. The purpose of the current scoping review is to provide a synthesis of recent literature pertaining to HPV in college and university age men, as a means to guiding health-care providers (HCPs). Drawing from 15 published articles, three thematic findings were inductively derived. Theme one, lack of awareness , was underpinned by men's knowledge deficits about their eligibility for, and the availability of HPV vaccines. Theme two, underestimating and embodying risk , included men's engagement in sexual activities while misinformed or denying the risk for contracting HPV. The third theme, strategies for increasing men's awareness , summarizes messaging strategies used to lobby young men to vaccinate. The review findings indicate gender-sensitive interventions targeting college-age men, including early, frequent, and consistent messaging on HPV are key.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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6. Male Perpetration of Adolescent Dating Violence: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Malhi N, Oliffe JL, Bungay V, and Kelly MT
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- Adolescent, Adverse Childhood Experiences, Humans, Intimate Partner Violence prevention & control, Italy, Male, Negotiating, Sexual Behavior, South Africa, Spain, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Intimate Partner Violence psychology
- Abstract
Male violence against females most often occurs within intimate relationships, and when that occurs during youth, it is termed adolescent dating violence (ADV). A scoping review focused on male perpetration of ADV was conducted to synthesize existing evidence and offer insights about what influences male adolescents to perpetrate ADV. The current scoping review explored the findings drawn from 16 research studies conducted in the United States, Spain, South Africa, and Italy, to distil modifiable factors related to male perpetration of ADV. Three themes were extrapolated from the 16 studies: (a) entitlement; (b) adverse childhood experiences (ACE); and (c) ineffective conflict management. Entitlement as a theme was characterized by attitudes and beliefs aligning to violence, hierarchical and marginalizing masculine norms, traditional gender roles, and male superiority, which in various configurations influenced the perpetration of ADV. ACE as a theme highlighted how male adolescents who had experienced, observed, and/or initiated abuse were at increased risk of perpetrating ADV. Male adolescents with ineffective conflict management (theme 3), including alcohol use and/or emotional dysregulation, were also at higher risk of perpetrating ADV. Tailored prevention efforts are often delinked from issues of male entitlement, ACE, and ineffective conflict management; therefore, we make suggestions for trauma-informed care to guide primary care providers (PCPs) in the assessment and management of ADV.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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7. Bridging Barriers to Cervical Cancer Screening in Transgender Men: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Dhillon N, Oliffe JL, Kelly MT, and Krist J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, United States, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Transgender Persons, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Estimates of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and susceptibility to HPV-related cancer in transgender men (TM) are comparable to prevalence rates found in cisgender women. Regular and thorough screening for cervical cancer is equally as crucial for TM as for cisgender women; however, despite continued risk for cervical cancer in TM and associated recommendations for screening, studies indicate disparities in rates of cervical cancer screening (CCS) in TM compared to cisgender women. The current scoping review explores TM's knowledge and experiences of CCS and barriers to screening uptake in this population. A range of barriers were identified including the need for health-care services to provide care for TM within the context of a nonbinary approach to gender identity and health. Findings synthesized from relevant research studies ( n = 15; published 2008-2019) are presented, and recommendations are drawn from these findings to inform primary health-care providers' clinical practice and care of TM.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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8. Internet Gaming Disorder: An Emergent Health Issue for Men.
- Author
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Chen KH, Oliffe JL, and Kelly MT
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Humans, Incidence, Internet statistics & numerical data, Male, Mental Health, Risk Assessment, United States, Behavior, Addictive epidemiology, Behavior, Addictive psychology, Men's Health, Video Games psychology, Video Games statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Internet gaming is a legitimate leisure activity worldwide; however, there are emerging concerns that vast numbers of gamers are becoming addicted. In 2013, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) classified Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) as a condition warranting more clinical research ahead of formalizing it as a mental disorder. Proposed as a behavioral addiction, IGD shares many similarities in both physical and psychosocial manifestations with substance use disorder, including cerebral changes on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Among the gaming population, compared to females, adolescent and adult males demonstrate far more addictive internet gaming use in terms of screen hours, craving, and negative impacts on health, which have, in isolated incidents, also caused death. The current article draws findings from a scoping review of literature related to IGD as a means to raising awareness about an emergent men's health issue. Included are three themes: (a) unveiling the nature, impacts and symptoms of IGD; (b) conceptualizing IGD through neuroscience; and (c) treatment approaches to IGD. Afforded by these themes is an overview and synthesis of the existing literature regarding IGD as a means of providing direction for much needed research on gaming addiction and orientating primary care providers (PCPs) to the specificities of IGD in men's health. The findings are applied to a discussion of the connections between IGD and masculinity and the importance of recognizing how behaviors such as social isolation and game immersion can be maladaptive coping strategies for males.
- Published
- 2018
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9. Men, Masculinities, and Murder-Suicide.
- Author
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Oliffe JL, Han CS, Drummond M, Sta Maria E, Bottorff JL, and Creighton G
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- Adult, Age Factors, Homicide psychology, Humans, Male, Men's Health, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Middle Aged, Needs Assessment, Risk Assessment, Self Concept, Sexual Behavior, Suicide psychology, United States, Violence statistics & numerical data, Workplace, Young Adult, Homicide statistics & numerical data, Masculinity, Men psychology, Suicide statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Murder-suicide (M-S) is a complex phenomenon that can involve a multifaceted set of interrelated biological and social factors. M-S is also sexed and gendered in that the perpetrators are most often male and their underpinning motives and actions link to masculinities in an array of diverse ways. With the overarching goal to describe connections between men, masculinities, and M-S, 296 newspaper articles describing 45 North American M-S cases were analyzed. The inductively derived findings revealed three themes: (a) domestic desperation, (b) workplace justice, and (c) school retaliation. Cases in the domestic desperation theme were characterized by the murder of a family member(s) and were often underpinned by men's self-perceptions of failing to provide economic security. Workplace justice cases emerged from men's grievances around paid-work, job insecurity, and perceptions of being bullied and/or marginalized by coworkers or supervisors. The school retaliation cases were strongly linked to "pay back" against individuals and/or society for the hardships endured by M-S perpetrators. Prevailing across the three themes was men's loss of control in their lives, hopelessness, and marginalized masculine identities. Also evident were men's alignments to hegemonic masculinities in reasserting one's masculine self by protesting the perceived marginalization invoked on them. Overall, the findings give pause to consider the need for men-centered M-S prevention strategies to quell the catastrophic impacts of this long-standing but understudied men's health issue., (© The Author(s) 2014.)
- Published
- 2015
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10. Fatherhood, smoking, and secondhand smoke in North America: an historical analysis with a view to contemporary practice.
- Author
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White C, Oliffe JL, and Bottorff JL
- Subjects
- Adult, Advertising history, Attitude to Health, Canada, Child, Father-Child Relations, Fathers statistics & numerical data, Female, Health Behavior, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Interpersonal Relations history, Male, North America, Paternal Behavior history, Smoking epidemiology, Social Perception, Social Responsibility, Socioeconomic Factors, Tobacco Smoke Pollution statistics & numerical data, United States, Women's Rights history, Fathers psychology, Health Promotion history, Inhalation Exposure statistics & numerical data, Masculinity history, Smoking history, Smoking psychology, Tobacco Smoke Pollution history
- Abstract
In the context of concerns about the effects of secondhand smoke on fetal health and the health of children, North American health promotion interventions have focused on reducing tobacco consumption among women to a greater extent than men. This is problematic when the health effects of men's secondhand smoke in family environments are considered. This article examines this gendered phenomenon in terms of a history of cigarette consumption that positions smoking as masculine. Furthermore, it demonstrates the value of addressing men's smoking using a gendered methodology, with an emphasis on fatherhood as an expression of masculine identity. Garnering health promotion programs to promote a culture of masculinity that is less individualistic, and defined in terms of responsibility and care for others, in addition to the self, has the potential to render men's smoking problematic and challenge the historic linkages between smoking and masculinity.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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11. Smokeless tobacco: a gender analysis and nursing focus.
- Author
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White C, Oliffe JL, and Bottorff JL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Advertising, Female, Harm Reduction, Humans, Male, Masculinity, Nursing, Prevalence, Sex Factors, Tobacco Use Cessation, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Men's Health, Tobacco, Smokeless
- Abstract
In recent times, rates of consumption of smokeless tobacco have increased significantly amongst specific subgroups of men, particularly young college men. Recent increases in smokeless tobacco consumption have been characterized by a shift from chewing tobacco to moist snuff. In addition to laying out the health risks of moist snuff, this article describes the social and gendered meanings of smokeless tobacco that reinforce its use. Men-centered approaches to raising awareness about the connections between moist snuff and oral cancer and the availability of oral cancer screening are highlighted as 2 key nursing practice considerations., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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