31 results on '"Dayoung Bae"'
Search Results
2. Multidimensional Health Trajectories and Their Correlates Among Older Adults
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Dayoung Bae and Eunbin Park
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- 2021
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3. Early socioeconomic adversity and young adult diabetic risk: an investigation of genetically informed biopsychosocial processes over the life course
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Kandauda A. S. Wickrama, Thulitha Wickrama, Dayoung Bae, and Michael Merten
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Adult ,Life Change Events ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Anthropology ,Genetics ,Humans ,Educational Status ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
The present study investigated a comprehensive model that integrates contributions of early socioeconomic adversity (ESA) and multiple polygenic scores (PGSs) through different mechanisms leading to diabetic risk in early adulthood. The study used prospective, longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent and Adult Health (Add Health) with a sample of 5,728 youth of European ancestry. The results showed that both ESA and PGSs were involved in different mechanisms. ESA contributed additively to educational failures, BMI, depressive symptoms, and diabetes risk over the life course (an additive process). Also, ESA launched a cascading process that connected these outcomes in a successively contingent manner. In addition to ESA, youths' multiple PGSs directly contributed to educational, psychological, and BMI outcomes. Multiple PGSs for education, BMI, and type 2 diabetes influenced not only youth outcomes that they were supposed to predict directly but also additional youth outcomes showing biological pleiotropy. The findings highlight the value of incorporating molecular genetic information into longitudinal developmental life course research and provide insight into malleable characteristics and appropriate timing for interventions addressing youth developmental and health outcomes.
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- 2022
4. Development of a Dietary Education Program for Korean Young Adults in Single-Person Households
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Yookyung Kim, Se Ho Joung, Dayoung Bae, and Lee Jung Woo
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Gerontology ,Single person ,Young adult ,Psychology - Published
- 2021
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5. Mental Health, Academic Engagement, and Youths’ Nonmedical Use of Stimulants: A Latent Profile Analysis
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Steve M. Kogan, Dayoung Bae, Inga Dora Sigfusdottir, and Alfgeir L. Kristjansson
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Student engagement ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Psychiatry ,Stimulant abuse ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mental health ,Europe ,Stimulant ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Mental Health ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,Substance use ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
Nonmedical prescription stimulant (NPS) use is a growing problem in Europe. Poor mental health and lack of academic engagement are potent sources of risk for substance use. Studies suggest that considerable heterogeneity may characterize the risk profiles of NPS users. To understand better the potential profiles of risk that characterize NPS users, we conducted a latent profile analysis (LPA) to document subgroups of users based on their mental health and academic engagement.A nationally representative, cross sectional survey of Icelandic youth was analyzed. The sample included 584 (5% of the sample) older adolescent students participating in a national study in Iceland who reported lifetime NPS use.Three subgroups of NPS users emerged from our analyses. The largest subgroup (43.1%) we labeled mentally healthy achievers; youth who appear to be academically motivated and have few if any mental health concerns. The second largest group (40.4%), low achievers, resembled a typical profile for drug users in that they reported low or modest academic engagement and moderate levels of mental health concerns. The third group, anxious achievers (16.5%) appears to represent youth who felt academics were very important, had moderate study motivation, and also reported elevated mental health concerns, especially anxiety.LPA revealed considerable heterogeneity among these users. Group membership suggests distinct approaches to prevention to address heterogeneity in motivations for NPS use.
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- 2021
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6. Social facilitation of alcohol subjective effects in adolescents: Associations with subsequent alcohol use
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Jessica L. Barrington-Trimis, Adam M. Leventhal, Matthew D. Stone, Raina D. Pang, Matthew G. Kirkpatrick, Dayoung Bae, and Junhan Cho
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Pharmacology ,Social facilitation ,Subjective effects ,business.industry ,Binge drinking ,Alcohol ,Context (language use) ,030227 psychiatry ,Odds ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,chemistry ,Binge drink ,Medicine ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography - Abstract
Laboratory research in adults indicates that alcohol-related subjective effects are enhanced under some social conditions. However, it is unknown whether this “social facilitation” of alcohol effects occurs in adolescents and is associated with alcohol use in the natural ecology. We examined associations of social facilitation of alcohol-related subjective effects with subsequent alcohol use among a relatively high-risk group of adolescents who reported drinking alcohol both with friends and alone. Los Angeles high school students from a prospective study (N = 142; 51% female; 10th graders) completed a baseline survey that assessed alcohol-related “positive” and “negative” subjective effects in two contexts: social (alcohol with friends) and solitary (alcohol alone); social facilitation was calculated as the difference between social and solitary. Students then completed five semi-annual surveys spanning 30 months (2014–2017) assessing 30-day alcohol use (days used, number of drinks, binge drinking). Greater social facilitation of positive effects was significantly associated with greater number of alcohol use days (RR [95% CI] = 1.48 [1.19, 1.82]; p
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- 2021
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7. Gezinsgerichte preventie van alcoholgebruik bij Afrikaans-Amerikaanse adolescenten: een gerandomiseerde klinische studie
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Dayoung Bae, Gene H. Brody, Steven M. Kogan, and Man-Kit Lei
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,Humanities ,media_common - Abstract
Doel: in deze studie is de werkzaamheid van het Strong African-American Families (SAAF) preventieprogramma voor alcoholgebruik getest. SAAF is een gezinsgericht programma van zeven sessies, waarin een vaardigheidstraining wordt aangeboden. In een eerdere studie zijn intent-to-treat-analyses (ITT) gebruikt, en dit bleek een beperking. Daarom hebben we nu een Complier Average Causal Effect (CACE) aangewend om de interventie-effecten te berekenen, en ook om de exacte dosering van de interventie te bepalen die nodig is om alcoholontmoediging te bewerkstelligen. Methode: op openbare scholen in zeven landelijke gebieden in Georgia is een steekproef van 472 Afrikaans-Amerikaanse jongeren en hun verzorgers geworven. De gezinnen zijn willekeurig toegewezen aan SAAF, of aan een controlegroep zonder behandeling. De jongeren hebben tijdens vier huisbezoeken gegevens verstrekt over hun alcoholgebruik tijdens de drie voorafgaande maanden. Het laatste huisbezoek vond 34 maanden na baseline plaats, en 28 maanden na de interventie. Resultaten: De werkzaamheid is getoetst met de latente groeicurvemodellen van Poisson. SAAF ontmoedigt de toename van alcoholgebruik in modellen met zowel ITT- als CACE-berekeningen. Uit CACE-analyses blijkt dat er bij deelnemers die het volledige aantal interventies (7 sessies) hebben ontvangen een groot behandeleffect is te zien voor afgeremde toename van alcoholgebruik (β = −0,83, p
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- 2020
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8. Racial Discrimination, Protective Parenting, and Binge Drinking Among Emerging Adult Black Men
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Steven M. Kogan and Dayoung Bae
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Male ,Rural Population ,Georgia ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Binge drinking ,Poison control ,Toxicology ,Racism ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Binge Drinking ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,media_common ,Parenting ,Stressor ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Moderation ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
PURPOSE Rural Black men experience escalating rates of binge drinking during emerging adulthood. We hypothesized that exposure to racial discrimination would predict growth in their binge-drinking trajectories and that protective parenting, including emotional and instrumental support and high expectations for success, would attenuate the influence of racial discrimination on growth in binge drinking. METHODS Hypotheses were tested with 3 waves of data from 505 men (ages 20.3, 21.9, and 23.1) participating in the African American Men's Project. Conditional and multigroup latent growth curve models (LGCMs) were implemented using Mplus. RESULTS LGCM indicated that binge-drinking frequency increased linearly across time; exposure to racial discrimination at baseline predicted growth in binge drinking (β = 0.19, p
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- 2020
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9. Romantic relationship trajectories among young African American men: The influence of adverse life contexts
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Dayoung Bae and Steven M. Kogan
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Adult ,Male ,05 social sciences ,Stressor ,Men ,PsycINFO ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Black or African American ,Young Adult ,Interpersonal relationship ,Sexual Partners ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,050902 family studies ,Schema (psychology) ,Humans ,Normative ,Interpersonal Relations ,0509 other social sciences ,Young adult ,Psychology ,Socioeconomic status ,Stress, Psychological ,General Psychology ,Disadvantage - Abstract
The development of supportive and committed romantic relationships during emerging adulthood forecasts relationship quality later in adulthood. Many emerging adult African American men are exposed to challenging socioeconomic environments that are known to undermine romantic relationships. Studies of African American men's romantic relationship quality and its antecedents during this developmental period are scarce. The present study investigates longitudinal trajectories of romantic relationship quality among African American emerging adult men and then tests a model linking them to adverse childhood experiences, socioeconomic instability, community disadvantage, and defensive relational schemas. The analytic sample included 331 African American men who reported having a romantic partner, observed during three waves of data collection from ages 19 to age 26. Using men's reports of romantic relationship support, conflict, and dyadic trust, parallel growth mixture modeling was conducted to identify romantic relationship trajectory profiles. We identified three romantic relationship trajectory profiles: Normative, Uncertain, and Conflictual. Structural equation analyses revealed that adverse childhood experiences were associated positively with contemporaneous contextual risk factors (i.e., socioeconomic instability and community disadvantage), which in turn, were associated significantly with membership in Uncertain and Conflictual trajectories through defensive relational schemas. The present study reveals heterogeneous romantic relationships among African American emerging adult men. Findings support the conjoint influences of early adversity and contemporaneous stressors as robust antecedents of African American men's romantic relationship behaviors over time. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
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10. Childhood Adversity, Socioeconomic Instability, Oxytocin-Receptor-Gene Methylation, and Romantic-Relationship Support Among Young African American Men
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Dayoung Bae, Shota Nishitani, Alicia K. Smith, Junhan Cho, and Steven M. Kogan
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Male ,Poison control ,Oxytocin ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Saliva ,Path analysis (statistics) ,Socioeconomic status ,Research Articles ,General Psychology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Methylation ,DNA Methylation ,Oxytocin receptor ,Black or African American ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Receptors, Oxytocin ,DNA methylation ,Empathy ,Psychology ,Stress, Psychological ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Men’s emerging adult romantic relationships forecast downstream relationship behavior, including commitment and quality. Accumulating evidence implicates methylation of the oxytocin-receptor-gene ( OXTR) system in regulating relationship behavior. We tested hypotheses regarding the links between (a) childhood adversity and (b) socioeconomic instability in emerging adulthood on supportive romantic relationships via their associations with OXTR methylation. Hypotheses were tested using path analysis with data from 309 participants in the African American Men’s Project. Consistent with our hypotheses, results showed that OXTR methylation proximally predicted changes in relationship support during a 1.5-year period. Childhood adversity was not directly associated with OXTR methylation but, rather, with contemporaneous socioeconomic instability, which in turn predicted elevated OXTR methylation. Findings suggest that early adversity is indirectly associated with OXTR methylation by links with downstream socioeconomic instability. Findings must be considered provisional, however, because preregistered replications are needed to establish more firmly the relations among these variables.
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- 2019
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11. Multilevel Interaction Effects of Family and Community Factors on Mothers' Engagement in Evidence-Based Home Visiting
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Anita C. Brown, Twanna Nelson, Junhan Cho, Darcey D. Terris, Rachael E. Glisson, and Dayoung Bae
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Adult ,030505 public health ,Evidence-based practice ,Family support ,Multilevel model ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mothers ,Mean age ,Sample (statistics) ,Interaction ,Disadvantaged ,Developmental psychology ,House Calls ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Family ,Female ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology - Abstract
Informed by ecological and family system frameworks, our study investigated the relationship between family- and community-level factors, and their cross-level interactions, with evidence-based home visiting program participation in a sample of 2409 mothers (mean age: 24.15 years). Using 2-level hierarchical linear modeling, we observed that mothers living in disadvantaged communities demonstrated less active engagement in evidence-based home visiting. Cross-level interaction effects revealed that mothers' unstable living conditions and psychiatric problems amplified the negative influence of disadvantaged communities on program engagement. Conversely, mothers who were first-time parents showed higher levels of participation in family support programs when they resided in disadvantaged communities.
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- 2019
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12. Pathways linking adverse environments to emerging adults' substance abuse and depressive symptoms: A prospective analysis of rural African American men
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Dayoung Bae, Shota Nishitani, Junhan Cho, Alicia K. Smith, and Steven M. Kogan
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Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Affect (psychology) ,Social Environment ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Risk Factors ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,African american men ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Depressive symptoms ,Depression ,05 social sciences ,Stressor ,Social change ,DNA Methylation ,medicine.disease ,Moderation ,Oxytocin receptor ,Substance abuse ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Receptors, Oxytocin ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
For African American emerging adult men, developmental challenges are evident in their escalating substance abuse and depressive symptoms; this is particularly true for men from low-resource communities. The present study tests a developmental model linking childhood adversity and contemporaneous contextual stressors to increases in emerging adults’ substance use and depressive symptoms, indirectly, via increases in defensive/hostile relational schemas and social developmental risk factors (e.g., risky peers and romantic partners, lack of involvement in school or work). We also advance exploratory hypotheses regarding DNA methylation in the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) as a moderator of the effects of stress on relational schemas. Hypotheses were tested with three waves of data from 505 rural African American men aged 19–25 years. Adverse childhood experiences predicted exposure to emerging adult contextual stressors. Contextual stressors forecast increases in defensive/hostile relational schemas, which increased social developmental risk factors. Social developmental risk factors proximally predicted increases in substance abuse and depressive symptoms. OXTR DNA methylation moderated the effects of contextual stressors on defensive/hostile relational schemas. Findings suggest that early exposures to stress carry forward to affect the development of social developmental risk factors in emerging adulthood, which place rural African American men at risk for increased substance abuse and depressive symptoms during the emerging adult years.
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- 2020
13. Social facilitation of alcohol subjective effects in adolescents: Associations with subsequent alcohol use
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Matthew G, Kirkpatrick, Junhan, Cho, Matthew D, Stone, Dayoung, Bae, Jessica L, Barrington-Trimis, Raina D, Pang, and Adam M, Leventhal
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Adult ,Male ,Social Facilitation ,Risk-Taking ,Adolescent ,Ethanol ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Underage Drinking ,Students ,Binge Drinking - Abstract
Laboratory research in adults indicates that alcohol-related subjective effects are enhanced under some social conditions. However, it is unknown whether this "social facilitation" of alcohol effects occurs in adolescents and is associated with alcohol use in the natural ecology.We examined associations of social facilitation of alcohol-related subjective effects with subsequent alcohol use among a relatively high-risk group of adolescents who reported drinking alcohol both with friends and alone.Los Angeles high school students from a prospective study (N = 142; 51% female; 10th graders) completed a baseline survey that assessed alcohol-related "positive" and "negative" subjective effects in two contexts: social (alcohol with friends) and solitary (alcohol alone); social facilitation was calculated as the difference between social and solitary. Students then completed five semi-annual surveys spanning 30 months (2014-2017) assessing 30-day alcohol use (days used, number of drinks, binge drinking).Greater social facilitation of positive effects was significantly associated with greater number of alcohol use days (RR [95% CI] = 1.48 [1.19, 1.82]; p .001), greater number of drinks (RR [95% CI] = 1.38 [1.14, 1.66]; p = .001), and greater odds of binge drinking (OR [95% CI] = 1.75 [1.20, 2.57]; p = .004). Similar associations were found with social positive effects. There were no significant associations between solitary positive effects-or any negative effects-and alcohol use outcomes.Social facilitation can be measured outside of the laboratory. Relatively high-risk drinking adolescents who are more susceptible to the social facilitation of subjective alcohol effects are more likely to use more alcohol and binge drink.
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- 2020
14. Romantic relationships among emerging adult African-American men: A latent profile analysis
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Kimberly A. Allen, Steven M. Kogan, Dayoung Bae, Junhan Cho, and Melinda A. Gonzales-Backen
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African american ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Romance ,050105 experimental psychology ,Downstream (manufacturing) ,Early adulthood ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Relationship development ,African american men ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Demography - Abstract
Studies of romantic relationships among emerging adult African-American men have the potential to inform downstream challenges observed in marriage and relationship development among African-Americ...
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- 2018
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15. Community contextual effects on at-risk mothers' engagement in Georgia's Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting programme
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Rachael E. Glisson, Anita C. Brown, Darcey D. Terris, Dayoung Bae, and Junhan Cho
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03 medical and health sciences ,030505 public health ,Health (social science) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Contextual effects ,05 social sciences ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Family engagement ,Early childhood ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 2018
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16. Beyond Family Demographics, Community Risk Influences Maternal Engagement in Home Visiting
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Darcey D. Terris, Rachael E. Glisson, Dayoung Bae, Anita C. Brown, and Junhan Cho
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Economic deprivation ,Gerontology ,Demographics ,business.industry ,First language ,05 social sciences ,Multilevel model ,Disadvantaged ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Early childhood ,Duration (project management) ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,business ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Poverty level - Abstract
The present study investigated the influence of multi-level determinants on home visiting participation outcomes. Home visiting participation was assessed by: (1) duration of participation (i.e., retention); (2) number of home visits completed (i.e., dosage), and (3) number of home visits completed divided by the duration of participation (i.e., intensity). The sample consisted of 1024 mothers (mean age 22.89 years) who participated in home visiting funded through Georgia’s Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting (MIECHV) program. Using hierarchical linear modeling, we investigated both family- and community-level characteristics associated with participation outcomes. Mothers (primary caregivers) were less likely to be retained in the program and more likely to have received fewer visits if they were not living with a main romantic partner or if their household incomes were below poverty level. The mothers were more likely to be actively engaged if their primary language was not English or if their child was relatively younger at enrollment. At the community level, after controlling family characteristics, living in a disadvantaged community (characterized by economic deprivation and elevated child health/safety risks) was associated with shorter and less intense program participation. These findings demonstrate that barriers to active engagement in home visiting programs persisted at multiple ecological levels. Explicitly considering the complexity of the communities in which home visiting programs are implemented may allow for more equitable allocations and expectations in future funding and performance measurement.
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- 2017
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17. Stress Processes Linking Parent–Child Disconnection to Disease Risk in Young Adulthood: Amplification by Genotype
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Kandauda A. S. Wickrama and Dayoung Bae
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Social Psychology ,Context (language use) ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Life Change Events ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Stress (linguistics) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Parent-Child Relations ,Young adult ,Serotonin Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,05 social sciences ,Stressor ,Health psychology ,Life course approach ,Female ,Disease Susceptibility ,Family Relations ,Disconnection ,Psychology ,Stress, Psychological ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Previous studies have documented that early stressful family relationships influence subsequent stressful life circumstances and health outcomes over the life course. Less is known, however, about whether stressful parent-child relationships increase the influence of proximal stressors on youth health operating as a stress-sensitizing life context, and individual genetic variations have effects on these developmental processes. Informed by life course stress process theory, which focuses on the proliferation, accumulation, and interactions of stressors over the life course as health risks, we examined whether (a) parent-child disconnection influences the occurrence of stressful life events in young adulthood, (b) parent-child disconnection potentiates the impact of stressful life events on young adults' health, or (c) potential health impact is intensified further by individual genotype. Using longitudinal data from a nationally representative sample of 11,290 adolescents (Mean age 15.5 years, 53% female) over a period of 13 years, we found parent-child disconnection influenced young adults' stressful life events and amplified the impact of stressful life events on cardio-metabolic disease risk. We also found the association between stressful life events and cardio-metabolic disease risk was further intensified by the 5-HTTLPR polymorphism. Our findings demonstrate that stressful family relationships not only initiate stress processes over the early life course, but also sensitize youth to stressors, and that 5-HTTLPR polymorphism interacts with stressful life experiences to predict heightened disease risk.
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- 2017
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18. Psychiatric comorbidity in adolescent use and poly-use of combustible, vaporized, and edible cannabis products
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Jessica L. Barrington-Trimis, Adam M. Leventhal, Afton Kechter, and Dayoung Bae
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Comorbidity ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Impulsivity ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Sensation seeking ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Cannabis ,biology ,business.industry ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Tobacco Products ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cannabis legalization and commercialization has resulted in novel alternative cannabis products on the market, including edible and vaporized cannabis, which may appeal to youth with psychiatric problems. Psychiatric comorbidity in adolescent use and poly-use (i.e., use of >2 products) of combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis products has largely gone uninvestigated. This 2015 cross-sectional survey of Los Angeles, California area adolescents (Mage = 16.1, N = 3177) characterized associations of various psychiatric problems with use and poly-use of combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis. Exposure variables included past 30-day non-cannabis substance use (alcohol, e-cigarettes, combustible cigarettes, and nonmedical prescription opioid and stimulant use; yes/no), and psychiatric problems including past-week depressive symptom frequency, past 6-month ADHD symptom and conduct problem frequency, anhedonia, and five dimensions of impulsivity (sensation seeking, perseverance, lack of premeditation, positive urgency, and negative urgency). Outcome variables included past 30-day use (yes/no) of combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis, independently, and number of cannabis products used (single, dual-use, poly-use). Results showed that all forms of non-cannabis substance use (ORs range: 13.7–36.1) and all psychiatric symptoms and traits (ORs in SD units range: 1.1–2.1) were positively associated with combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis product use. The magnitude of comorbidity did not significantly differ by cannabis product type used in most cases. Psychiatric comorbidity was typically stronger in poly-product than single-product cannabis use and greater for externalizing-type than internalizing-type psychiatric problems. Practitioners, policy makers, and scientists should be aware that pervasive psychiatric comorbidity may be observed across the spectrum of cannabis product use among adolescents, particularly poly-product users.
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- 2019
19. Family-Centered Alcohol Use Prevention for African American Adolescents: A Randomized Clinical Trial
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Dayoung Bae, Steven M. Kogan, Gene H. Brody, and Man-Kit Lei
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Male ,Rural Population ,050103 clinical psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Georgia ,Adolescent ,MEDLINE ,PsycINFO ,Underage Drinking ,Article ,law.invention ,Skills training ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Health care ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,African american ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Causal effect ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Family medicine ,Family Therapy ,Female ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The efficacy of the Strong African American Families (SAAF) alcohol use prevention program was tested. SAAF is a 7-session family skills training program offered in community settings. To overcome limitations of a past trial that used intent-to-treat (ITT) analyses, a Complier Average Causal Effect (CACE) analysis was used to estimate intervention effects and to determine the precise dosage of the intervention needed to achieve alcohol deterrence. METHOD A sample of 472 African American youth and their caregivers were recruited randomly from public schools in 7 rural Georgia counties. Families were assigned randomly to receive SAAF or a no-treatment control. Youth provided data on their alcohol use during the past 3 months at 4 home visits, the final occurring 34 months after baseline and 28 months after the intervention. RESULTS Efficacy was tested with Poisson latent growth curve models. SAAF deterred growth in alcohol use in models using both ITT and CACE estimation. CACE analyses revealed that, among participants who received a full dose of the intervention (7 sessions), a large treatment effect on slowed growth in alcohol use emerged (β = -.83, p < .001). Dose-response analyses in CACE models revealed a medium-sized effect (d [95% CI] = 1.51 [1.25, 1.75]) when participants attended at least 5 of the 7 sessions offered. CONCLUSIONS Replication of SAAF in a second randomized prevention trial supports the robustness of program effects. It is critical, however, that participant engagement protocols be designed to encourage participation in as at least 5 of the 7 sessions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
20. Characterizing the predictive validity of measures of susceptibility to future use of combustible, vaporized and edible cannabis products in adolescent never-users
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Jennifer B. Unger, Dayoung Bae, Sara J. Schiff, Jordan P. Davis, Jessica L. Barrington-Trimis, and Adam M. Leventhal
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Predictive validity ,Male ,Adolescent ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Intention to use ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Students ,biology ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,biology.organism_classification ,Los Angeles ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Adolescent Behavior ,Cannabis product ,Female ,Marijuana Use ,Cannabis ,Composite index ,Substance use ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Background and aims The construct of susceptibility to substance use initiation (i.e. cognitive proclivity to future use) is critical for prevention efforts in adolescent populations. This study aimed to provide empirical evidence for the validity of the susceptibility construct for different cannabis products (i.e. combustible, edible or vaporized cannabis), and evaluate whether susceptibility measures are predictive of subsequent initiation. Design Prospective cohort study including baseline data (Spring 2015) and four follow-up surveys administered every 6 months through Spring 2017. Setting Ten schools in the Los Angeles, California metropolitan area. Participants Adolescents [n = 2100; mean age = 16.1; standard deviation (SD) = 0.41; 54% female] who reported never having used any cannabis product at baseline. Measurements We assessed five indices of a susceptibility to use cannabis composite index at baseline, adapted from a validated tobacco use index (intention to use, willingness, curiosity and positive/negative cannabis use outcome expectancies, with four response categories, definitely not [1] to definitely yes [4]), by cannabis product (combustible, edible or vaporized). A composite index was created for each product by averaging responses across the five susceptibility items. Subsequent initiation of use of each cannabis product was assessed at each follow-up wave. Findings Factorial validity for unidimensionality for each five-item index (by product) was confirmed. The composite index for susceptibility to cannabis use was greatest for combustible (mean = 1.44; SD = 0.58), moderate for edible (mean = 1.37; SD = 0.53) and lowest for vaporized cannabis (mean = 1.30; SD = 0.44). The associations of each composite susceptibility index with subsequent initiation of that product and each of the other cannabis products over follow-up (i.e. cross-product associations) were statistically significant, with hazard ratios ranging from 2.30 to 2.80 across 24 months of follow-up (all Ps Conclusions A five-item susceptibility to cannabis use composite index (by product) appears to be useful for characterizing and predicting youth at risk for cannabis use initiation across a spectrum of cannabis products.
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- 2019
21. Subjective effects of combustible, vaporized, and edible cannabis: Results from a survey of adolescent cannabis users
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Jessica L. Barrington-Trimis, Jordan P. Davis, Dayoung Bae, Matthew G. Kirkpatrick, Esthelle Ewusi Boisvert, Stephanie H. Chai, Adam M. Leventhal, Lorraine I. Kelley-Quon, and Raina D. Pang
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Male ,Subjective effects ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Health ,030508 substance abuse ,Poison control ,Toxicology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,Abuse liability ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Students ,Generalized estimating equation ,Cannabis ,Retrospective Studies ,Pharmacology ,biology ,business.industry ,Nebulizers and Vaporizers ,Cannabis use ,biology.organism_classification ,Los Angeles ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Observational study ,Female ,Marijuana Use ,Self Report ,Plants, Edible ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Data from controlled laboratory experiments in adults indicate that the subjective effects of cannabis vary by administration method (e.g., combustible, vaporized). Whether the subjective effects of cannabis experienced in the natural ecology and among adolescents differ by cannabis administration method is unknown. In this observational study, adolescents' retrospective reports of subjective effects after combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis use were examined.Students from ten public schools in Los Angeles, CA, USA (M[SD] age = 16.1 [.43] years) who reported past 6-month use of combustible, edible, or vaporized cannabis (N = 584) were surveyed on subjective effects experienced after use (yes/no). They were provided with a 12 item self-report checklist of six positive (e.g., relaxed, energetic) and six negative (e.g., drowsy, lazy) subjective effects. For each method of administration, affirmative responses were summed in positive (range: 0-6) and negative (range: 0-6) effect composite scores.Generalized estimating equations adjusted for demographics and recent cannabis use revealed a graded pattern of differences in positive subjective effects across products, with highest scores for combustible (M[SD] = 3.98[1.76]), followed by edible (M[SD] = 3.58 [2.04]) and vaporized (M[SD] = 3.11 [2.21]) cannabis (all pairwise cross-product contrasts p .01). Mean negative effect score was highest for edible (M[SD] = 2.27 [1.95]), followed by combustible (M[SD] = 1.94 [1.66]), and vaporized (M[SD] = 1.34 [1.73]) cannabis, respectively (all pairwise contrasts p .02).Adolescents' reports of subjective effects varied across cannabis administration methods. Combustible cannabis' more desirable subjective effects profile might be indicative of higher abuse liability.
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- 2019
22. Prevalence and Sociodemographic Correlates of Adolescent Use and Polyuse of Combustible, Vaporized, and Edible Cannabis Products
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Dayoung Bae, Brantley P. Jarvis, Jessica L. Barrington-Trimis, Erica N. Peters, and Adam M. Leventhal
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Marijuana Abuse ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Frequency of use ,Adolescent Health ,Pediatrics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,030225 pediatrics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Socioeconomic status ,Cannabis ,Original Investigation ,biology ,business.industry ,4. Education ,Public health ,Nebulizers and Vaporizers ,Research ,Survey research ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Los Angeles ,3. Good health ,Online Only ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Adolescent Behavior ,Cannabis product ,Female ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Key Points Question What are the prevalence, patterns, and correlates of use and polyuse of combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis products among adolescents? Findings In a 2015 cross-sectional survey study of 3177 adolescents, ever use of edible (21.3%) or vaporized (10.5%) cannabis was appreciable, and most ever users of cannabis (61.7%) used at least 2 products. Current use was higher in boys than girls for vaporized (6.1% vs 3.0%) but not for combustible (13.8% vs 13.1%) or edible (8.4% vs 7.3%) cannabis. Meaning Health professionals should be aware that youth might use a diverse spectrum of combustible and alternative cannabis products., This cross-sectional survey study investigates the prevalence, patterns, and sociodemographic correlates of cannabis product use and polyuse by administration methods (combustible, vaporized, and edible) among a sample of adolescents in 10th grade., Importance Cannabis legalization and commercialization have introduced novel alternative cannabis products, including edible and vaporized cannabis that might appeal to youth and be associated with polyuse (ie, use of ≥2 different products). Objective To investigate the prevalence, patterns, and sociodemographic correlates of cannabis product use across combustible, edible, and vaporized administration methods, including polyuse of cannabis via multiple administration methods. Design, Setting, and Participants This cross-sectional survey study included 10th-grade students from 10 Los Angeles, California, area high schools from January 2 through October 6, 2015. Students were recruited from respondents in the Happiness and Health Study, an ongoing prospective cohort study in the 10 high schools. Students not in school during administration of the pencil-and-paper survey completed abbreviated surveys by telephone, internet, or mail. Data were analyzed from July 17, 2017, through July 12, 2018. Exposures Self-reported sex, race/ethnicity, and socioeconomic status (SES). Students with high SES had parents who attained college or a higher educational level and were ineligible for free or subsidized lunch; those with low SES had parents with lower educational attainment or were eligible for free or subsidized lunch. Main Outcomes and Measures Self-report of ever use (yes or no) and past 30-day use (yes or no) status and frequency of use (days in past 30 days) of combustible, edible, and vaporized cannabis. Results The sample included 3177 tenth-grade students (93.5% of study enrollees); among these students, 1715 (54.0%) were girls and the mean (SD) age was 16.1 (0.4) years. Among those with available demographic data, respondents were diverse in race/ethnicity (537 [17.2%] Asian; 149 [4.8%] black; 1510 [48.3%] Hispanic; 507 [16.2%] white; 207 [6.6%] multiethnic/multiracial; and 216 [6.9%] other) and included 1654 (60.1%) with a low SES. Prevalence of ever use was highest for combustible products (993 [31.3%]), followed by edible (676 [21.3%]) and vaporized (333 [10.5%]) products. A similar pattern was found for past 30-day use (426 [13.4%] for combustible, 249 [7.8%] for edible, and 156 [4.9%] for vaporized cannabis). Among participants who reported using cannabis in the past 30 days, mean frequency of use of combustible cannabis was higher by 2.65 days (95% CI, 1.40-3.91 days, P = .001) than the mean frequency of use for edible cannabis and 1.75 days higher (95% CI, 0.59-2.90 days, P = .003) than frequency of use for vaporized cannabis. Most cannabis users (665 [61.7%]) used multiple administration methods, and 260 (8.2%) used all 3 methods. Boys had higher prevalence of ever use for vaporized (170 [11.6%] vs 163 [9.5%]) but not combustible (459 [31.4%] vs 534 [31.1%]) or edible (303 [20.7%] vs 373 [21.7%]) cannabis. Respondents with low SES had higher prevalence of ever use for combustible (614 [37.1%] vs 242 [22.0%]) and edible (408 [24.7%] vs 166 [15.1%]) but not vaporized (186 [11.2%] vs 93 [8.5%]) cannabis. Conclusions and Relevance Among 10th-grade students in Los Angeles, use of cannabis via alternative administration methods was of appreciable prevalence, predominately reported in conjunction with other cannabis products and unequally distributed across sociodemographic strata. Prevention programs and regulatory restrictions addressing the spectrum of cannabis products might benefit pediatric public health.
- Published
- 2019
23. KoganSupplementalMaterial_rev – Supplemental material for Childhood Adversity, Socioeconomic Instability, Oxytocin-Receptor-Gene Methylation, and Romantic-Relationship Support Among Young African American Men
- Author
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Kogan, Steven M., Dayoung Bae, Junhan Cho, Smith, Alicia K., and Nishitani, Shota
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FOS: Psychology ,FOS: Clinical medicine ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,110319 Psychiatry (incl. Psychotherapy) ,110904 Neurology and Neuromuscular Diseases ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Supplemental material, KoganSupplementalMaterial_rev for Childhood Adversity, Socioeconomic Instability, Oxytocin-Receptor-Gene Methylation, and Romantic-Relationship Support Among Young African American Men by Steven M. Kogan, Dayoung Bae, Junhan Cho, Alicia K. Smith and Shota Nishitani in Psychological Science
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Pathways linking early socioeconomic adversity to diverging profiles of romantic relationship dissolution in young adulthood
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Kandauda A. S. Wickrama and Dayoung Bae
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,05 social sciences ,PsycINFO ,Romance ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Cohabitation ,Sexual Partners ,Adult Survivors of Child Adverse Events ,050902 family studies ,Divorce ,Humans ,Female ,Interpersonal Relations ,Longitudinal Studies ,0509 other social sciences ,Young adult ,Future orientation ,Marriage ,Psychology ,Socioeconomic status ,General Psychology - Abstract
Although studies on romantic relationships are abundant, cumulative experiences in intimate relationship dissolution (i.e., dissolution of cohabitation and marriage) during young adulthood is not yet completely understood. Using a nationally representative sample of 9,275 young adults, we investigated heterogeneity in timing and frequency of relationship dissolution during young adulthood, as well as its developmental precursors to dissolution. Results indicated four distinct relationship-dissolution classes that ranged from those who maintained stable romantic relationships to those who experienced multiple cohabitation dissolutions and divorces from ages 18 to 30 years. Early socioeconomic adversity predicted relationship-dissolution trajectories directly and indirectly through psychosociodemographic mechanisms in adolescence, including disrupted transitions to adulthood, conflict in dating relationships, and low levels of future orientation. Our findings highlight the heterogeneous romantic relationship trajectories of young adults and support the importance of the person-centered approach in elucidating developmental pathways underlying the longitudinal transitions in romantic relationships. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2018
25. Lower life satisfaction, active coping and cardiovascular disease risk factors in older African Americans: outcomes of a longitudinal church-based intervention
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Jasminka Z. Ilich, Dayoung Bae, Kandauda A. S. Wickrama, Yesenia P Mendez, Penny A. Ralston, and Iris Young-Clark
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Gerontology ,Male ,Religion and Psychology ,Coping (psychology) ,Prodromal Symptoms ,050109 social psychology ,Health Promotion ,Personal Satisfaction ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Risk Factors ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Life satisfaction ,Middle Aged ,Church based ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health psychology ,Blood pressure ,Health promotion ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Disease risk ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
This study examined lower life satisfaction, active coping and cardiovascular disease risk factors (diastolic and systolic blood pressure, body mass index, and circumferences) in older African Americans over the phases of an 18-month church-based intervention, using a quasi-experimental design. Participants (n = 89) were 45 years of age and older from six churches (three treatment, three comparison) in North Florida. Lower life satisfaction had a persistent unfavorable effect on weight variables. Active coping showed a direct beneficial effect on selected weight variables. However, active coping was adversely associated with blood pressure, and did not moderate the association between lower life satisfaction and cardiovascular risk factors. The intervention had a beneficial moderating influence on the association between lower life satisfaction and weight variables and on the association between active coping and these variables. Yet, this pattern did not hold for the association between active coping and blood pressure. The relationship of lower life satisfaction and selected cardiovascular risk factors and the positive effect of active coping were established, but findings regarding blood pressure suggest further study is needed.
- Published
- 2018
26. Life Course Patterns of Concurrent Trajectories of BMI and Affective Symptoms of Rural Mothers: Socioeconomic Antecedents and Disease Outcomes in Later Life
- Author
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Dayoung Bae, Catherine Walker O'Neal, Eric T Klopack, Steven R. H. Beach, Kandauda A. S. Wickrama, Tricia K. Neppl, and Frederick O. Lorenz
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Risk ,Rural Population ,Social Psychology ,Health Status ,Psychological intervention ,MEDLINE ,Mothers ,Comorbidity ,The Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences ,Anxiety ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Body Mass Index ,Midwestern United States ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Affective Symptoms ,Longitudinal Studies ,Socioeconomic status ,Aged ,Depression ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Chronic Disease ,Life course approach ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Gerontology ,Body mass index ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objectives The current study, using prospective data over 25 years (1991–2015), concurrently investigates patterns of body mass index (BMI) and affective symptom trajectories in middle-aged mothers and the socioeconomic antecedents and disease outcomes of these patterns. Method Growth mixture modeling was used to identify latent classes of conjoint health risk trajectories (BMI, depressive symptoms, and anxiety symptoms) from 1991 to 2001. For each latent class, we identified mean trajectories of each health risk. Then, analyses were conducted identifying how these conjoint health risk classes were associated with respondents’ socioeconomic background profiles in 1991 and subsequent chronic health problems in 2015. Results Socioeconomic background profiles were significantly associated with initially high-risk trajectories. There was a statistically significant association between membership in certain classes of conjoint trajectories and physical health outcomes in later years. Consistent patterns of association with changes in different health outcomes including onset of diseases were observed when classes of conjoint risk trajectories are examined. Discussion The identification of members of various conjoint risk trajectory groups provides a potentially useful prognostic tool for early preventive intervention efforts, treatment, and policy formation. Such interventions should promote and develop resiliency factors, thereby aiding in the redirection of middle-aged women’s adverse risk trajectories.
- Published
- 2017
27. Family Socioeconomic Status and Academic Achievement Among Korean Adolescents
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Dayoung Bae and Kandauda A. S. Wickrama
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Parental monitoring ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Context (language use) ,Academic achievement ,Educational attainment ,Developmental psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parenting styles ,Time management ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Welfare ,Socioeconomic status ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This study examined pathways through which family socioeconomic status may influence adolescents’ academic achievement. We focused on parental monitoring and adolescents’ after-school time-use patterns as linking mechanisms. Participants were 441 twelve- to fourteen-year-old Korean adolescents who participated in the Korea Welfare Panel Study. Higher family economic pressure was linked with lower parental monitoring through elevated levels of parental depression. Parental monitoring was associated with more time spent in structured learning-oriented activities and less time spent in unstructured nonacademic activities. Both types of time-use activities and parental monitoring were associated with academic achievement. The results supported both the family stress model and the family investment model, indicating that families’ socioeconomic conditions were directly and indirectly linked to adolescents’ academic achievement. The findings are discussed in the context of Korean culture, which emphasizes high parental involvement and economic investment in children’s education. We also present broader implications beyond the local context.
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- 2014
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28. Social consequences of early socioeconomic adversity and youth BMI trajectories: Gender and race/ethnicity differences
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Dayoung Bae, Catherine Walker O'Neal, and Kandauda A. S. Wickrama
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Male ,Parents ,Race ethnicity ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Ethnic group ,Body Mass Index ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Sex Factors ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Obesity ,Young adult ,Child ,Poverty ,Socioeconomic status ,Disadvantage ,Marital Status ,Racial Groups ,Public Assistance ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Income ,Educational Status ,Life course approach ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
The present study investigated the mediating effects of adolescent BMI trajectories on socioeconomic continuity over the early life course using a nationally representative sample of 11,075 respondents. This study considered both the initial severity as well as change over time in BMI as psycho-physiological mediators. Consistent with the life course pathway model and the cumulative advantage and disadvantage principle, the results suggested that early socioeconomic adversity is associated with youth BMI trajectories over time, which in turn, impair young adult socioeconomic attainment. The results also revealed important gender and racial/ethnic differences in the hypothesized associations. These findings elucidate how early adversity exerts an enduring long-term influence on social attainment in young adulthood. Further, the findings suggest that effective obesity intervention and prevention programs should focus not only on the severity of obesity but also on growth in BMI over the early years.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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29. Black-White Disparity in Young Adults' Disease Risk: An Investigation of Variation in the Vulnerability of Black Young Adults to Early and Later Adversity
- Author
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Dayoung Bae, Catherine Walker O'Neal, and Kandauda A. S. Wickrama
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Gerontology ,Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Heart Diseases ,Population ,Poison control ,Disease ,Suicide prevention ,Vulnerable Populations ,Occupational safety and health ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Young adult ,education ,Child ,Socioeconomic status ,Poverty ,education.field_of_study ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Health Status Disparities ,United States ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Disease Susceptibility ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Purpose Socioeconomic adversity in early years and young adulthood are risk factors for poor health in young adulthood. Population differences in exposure to stressful socioeconomic conditions partly explain the higher prevalence of disease among black young adults. Another plausible mechanism is that blacks are differentially vulnerable to socioeconomic adversity (differential vulnerability hypothesis), which has not been adequately investigated in previous research. The present study investigated variation in the vulnerability of black young adults leading to cardiometabolic (CM) disease risk. Methods We used a nationally representative sample of 8,824 adolescents who participated in the Add Health study. Early and later adversity was measured using a cumulative index of social and material adversity in adolescence and young adulthood. CM disease risk was assessed using nine biomarkers. Path analysis within a structural equation modeling framework was used. Results The findings indicated that both early and later socioeconomic adversity act as stressors with independent additive influences on young adults' CM disease risk, consistent with the differential exposure hypothesis. Moreover, the results showed that black youth are less vulnerable to early socioeconomic adversity than whites, but they are more vulnerable to later adversity. Conclusions The findings provide support for the unique and additive influences of early and later socioeconomic adversity on CM disease risk contributing to the black-white health disparity in young adulthood. The results also suggest that vulnerability to adversity varies depending on the life stage, which highlights the need for life-stage specific interventions to mitigate the existing black-white disparity in young adults' physical health.
- Published
- 2016
30. Multilevel Interaction Effects of Family and Community Factors on Mothers' Engagement in Evidence-Based Home Visiting.
- Author
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Dayoung Bae, Junhan Cho, Terris, Darcey D., Glisson, Rachael E., Brown, Anita, Nelson, Twanna, Bae, Dayoung, and Cho, Junhan
- Abstract
Informed by ecological and family system frameworks, our study investigated the relationship between family- and community-level factors, and their cross-level interactions, with evidence-based home visiting program participation in a sample of 2409 mothers (mean age: 24.15 years). Using 2-level hierarchical linear modeling, we observed that mothers living in disadvantaged communities demonstrated less active engagement in evidence-based home visiting. Cross-level interaction effects revealed that mothers' unstable living conditions and psychiatric problems amplified the negative influence of disadvantaged communities on program engagement. Conversely, mothers who were first-time parents showed higher levels of participation in family support programs when they resided in disadvantaged communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Pathways linking early socioeconomic adversity to diverging profiles of romantic relationship dissolution in young adulthood.
- Author
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Dayoung Bae, Wickrama, Kandauda A. S., and Bae, Dayoung
- Abstract
Although studies on romantic relationships are abundant, cumulative experiences in intimate relationship dissolution (i.e., dissolution of cohabitation and marriage) during young adulthood is not yet completely understood. Using a nationally representative sample of 9,275 young adults, we investigated heterogeneity in timing and frequency of relationship dissolution during young adulthood, as well as its developmental precursors to dissolution. Results indicated four distinct relationship-dissolution classes that ranged from those who maintained stable romantic relationships to those who experienced multiple cohabitation dissolutions and divorces from ages 18 to 30 years. Early socioeconomic adversity predicted relationship-dissolution trajectories directly and indirectly through psychosociodemographic mechanisms in adolescence, including disrupted transitions to adulthood, conflict in dating relationships, and low levels of future orientation. Our findings highlight the heterogeneous romantic relationship trajectories of young adults and support the importance of the person-centered approach in elucidating developmental pathways underlying the longitudinal transitions in romantic relationships. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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