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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
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Appendix A

References

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Betancourt, L. M., W. Yang, N. L. Brodsky, P. R. Gallagher, E. K. Malmud, J. M. Giannetta, M. J. Farah, and H. Hurt. 2011. Adolescents with and without gestational cocaine exposure: Longitudinal analysis of inhibitory control, memory and receptive language. Neurotoxicology and Teratology 33(1):36–46.

Brody, G. H., T. Yu, E. Chen, G. E. Miller, S. M. Kogan, and S. R. Beach. 2013. Is resilience only skin deep? Rural African Americans’ socioeconomic status-related risk and competence in preadolescence and psychological adjustment and allostatic load at age 19. Psychological Science 24(7):1285–1293.

Brody, G. H., M. K. Lei, D. H. Chae, T. Yu, S. M. Kogan, and S. R. H. Beach. 2014. Perceived discrimination among African American adolescents and allostatic load: A longitudinal analysis with buffering effects. Child Development 85(3):989–1002.

Case, A., and A. Deaton. 2015. Rising morbidity and mortality in midlife among white non-Hispanic Americans in the 21st century. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America 112(49):15078–15083.

Class, Q. A., A. S. Khashan, P. Lichtenstein, N. Långström, and B. M. D’Onofrio. 2013. Maternal stress and infant mortality: The importance of the preconception period. Psychological Science 24(7):1309–1316.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
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Doleac, J., and A. Mukherjee. 2018. The moral hazard of life-saving innovations: Naloxone access, opioid abuse, and crime. IZA Discussion Paper 11489. http://ftp.iza.org/dp11489.pdf (accessed December 23, 2020).

Dominguez, K., A. Penman-Aguilar, M. H. Chang, R. Moonesinghe, T. Castellanos, A. Rodriguez-Lainz, and R. Schieber. 2015. Vital signs: Leading causes of death, prevalence of diseases and risk factors, and use of health services among Hispanics in the United States—2009–2013. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 64(17):469–478.

Dore, R. A., K. M. Hoffman, A. S. Lillard, and S. Trawalter. 2014. Children’s racial bias in perceptions of others’ pain. British Journal of Developmental Psychology 32(2):218–231.

GBD (Global Burden of Disease) 2015 Maternal Mortality Collaborators. 2016. Global, regional, and national levels of maternal mortality, 1990-2015: A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. Lancet 388(10053):1775–1812.

Hamilton, T. G., and T. L. Green. 2018. From the West Indies to Africa: A universal generational decline in health among blacks in the United States. Social Science Research 73:163–174.

Ho, J. Y. 2017. The contribution of drug overdose to educational gradients in life expectancy in the United States, 1992–2011. Demography 54:1175–1202.

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Kaestner, R., J. A. Pearson, D. Keene, and A. T. Geronimus. 2009. Stress, allostatic load and health of Mexican immigrants. Social Science Quarterly 90(5):1089–1111.

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Keyes, K. M., G. D. Smith, K. C. Koenen, and S. Galea. 2015. The mathematical limits of genetic prediction for complex chronic disease. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 69(6):574–579.

Kindig, D. 1997. Purchasing population health: Paying for results. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

Kindig, D. 2015. From health determinant benchmarks to health investment benchmarks. Preventing Chronic Disease 12:E41.

Kindig, D., and G. Stoddart. 2003. What is population health? American Journal of Public Health 93(3):380–383.

Leitner, J. B., E. Hehman, O. Ayduk, and R. Mendoza-Denton. 2016. Blacks’ death rate due to circulatory diseases is positively related to whites’ explicit racial bias. Psychological Science 27(10):1299–1311.

Leventhal, A. M., J. Cho, N. Andrabi, and J. Barrington-Trimis. 2018. Association of reported concern about increasing societal discrimination with adverse behavioral health outcomes in late adolescence. JAMA Pediatrics 172(10):924–933.

Ma, J., E. M. Ward, R. L. Siegel, and A. Jemal. 2015. Temporal trends in mortality in the United States, 1969–2013. JAMA 314(16):1731–1739.

Mackenbach, J. P., J. R. Valverde, B. Artnik, M. Bopp, H. Brønnum-Hansen, P. Deboosere, R. Kalediene, K. Kovács, M. Leinsalu, P. Martikainen, G. Menvielle, E. Regidor, J. Rychtaříková, M. Rodriguez-Sanz, P. Vineis, C. White, B. Wojtyniak, Y. Hu, and W. J. Nusselder. 2018. Trends in health inequalities in 27 European countries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115(25):6440–6445.

Meigs, J. B., P. Shrader, L. M. Sullivan, J. B. McAteer, C. S. Fox, J. Dupuis, A. K. Manning, J. C. Florez, P. W. Wilson, R. B. D’Agostino, Sr., and L. A. Cupples. 2008. Genotype score in addition to common risk factors for prediction of type 2 diabetes. New England Journal of Medicine 359(21):2208–2219.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
×

Montez, J. K., A. Zajacova, and M. D. Hayward. 2016. Explaining inequalities in women’s mortality between U.S. states. SSM Population Health 2:561–571.

Mundinger, M. O. 1985. Health service funding cuts and the declining health of the poor. New England Journal of Medicine 313(1):44–47.

Murray, C. J. L., S. C. Kulkarni, C. Michaud, N. Tomijima, M. T. Bulzacchelli, T. J. Iandiorio, and M. Ezzati. 2006. Eight Americas: Investigating mortality disparities across races, counties, and race-counties in the United States. PLoS Medicine 3(9):e260.

NCHS (National Center for Health Statistics). 2017. Health, United States, 2016: With chartbook on long-term trends in health. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics.

Novak, N. L., A. T. Geronimus, and A. M. Martinez-Cardoso. 2017. Change in birth outcomes among infants born to Latina mothers after a major immigration raid. International Journal of Epidemiology 46(3):839–849.

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NRC. 2011. Explaining divergent levels of longevity in high-income countries. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

NRC and IOM (Institute of Medicine). 2013. U.S. health in international perspective: Shorter lives, poorer health. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

Pepe, M. S., H. Janes, G. Longton, W. Leisenring, and P. Newcomb. 2004. Limitations of the odds ratio in gauging the performance of a diagnostic, prognostic, or screening marker. American Journal of Epidemiology 159:882–890.

Priest, N., N. Slopen, S. Woolford, J. T. Philip, D. Singer, A. D. Kauffman, K. Mosely, M. Davis, Y. Ransome, and D. Williams. 2018. Stereotyping across intersections of race and age: Racial stereotyping among white adults working with children. PLoS One 13(9):e0201696.

Roberts, A. L., Y. Chen, N. Slopen, K. A. McLaughlin, K. C. Koenen, and S. B. Austin. 2015. Maternal experience of abuse in childhood and depressive symptoms in adolescent and adult offspring: A 21-year longitudinal study. Depression and Anxiety 32(10):709–719.

Rose, G. 2001. Sick individuals and sick populations. International Journal of Epidemiology 30(3):427–432. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/30.3.427. (Reprint of 1985 article in the journal.)

Sasson, I. 2016. Trends in life expectancy and lifespan variation by educational attainment: United States, 1990–2010. Demography 53(2):269–293.

SPLC (Southern Poverty Law Center). 2016. The Trump effect: The impact of the 2016 presidential election on our nation’s schools. https://www.splcenter.org/20161128/trump-effect-impact-2016-presidential-election-our-nations-schools (accessed December 23, 2020).

Toomey, R. B., A. J. Umaña-Taylor, D. R. Williams, E. Harvey-Mendoza, L. B. Jahromi, and K. A. Updegraff. 2014. Impact of Arizona’s SB 1070 immigration law on utilization of health care and public assistance among Mexican-origin adolescent mothers and their mother figures. American Journal of Public Health 104(Suppl 1):S28–S34.

UNICEF (United Nations Children’s Fund). 2012. Measuring child poverty: New league tables of child poverty in the world’s rich countries. Innocenti Report Card 10. Florence, Italy: UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre. https://www.unicef-irc.org/publications/pdf/rc10_eng.pdf (accessed December 23, 2020).

Walley, A. Y., Z. Xuan, H. H. Hackman, E. Quinn, M. Doe-Simkins, A. Sorensen-Alawad, S. Ruiz, and A. Ozonoff. 2013. Opioid overdose rates and implementation of overdose education and nasal naloxone distribution in Massachusetts: Interrupted time series analysis. British Medical Journal 346:174.

Williams, D. R., and V. Purdie-Vaughns. 2017. Needed interventions to reduce racial/ethnic disparities in health. Journal of Health, Politics and Policy Law 41(4):627–651.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
×

Woolf, S. H., D. A. Chapman, J. M. Buchanich, K. J. Bobby, E. B. Zimmerman, and S. M. Blackburn. 2018. Changes in midlife death rates across racial and ethnic groups in the United States: Systematic analysis of vital statistics. BMJ 362:k3096.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
×
Page 47
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
×
Page 48
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
×
Page 49
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2022. Population Health Science in the United States: Trends, Evidence, and Implications for Policy: Proceedings of a Joint Symposium. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25631.
×
Page 50
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On October 3, 2018, the Roundtable on Population Health Improvement of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and the Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science convened a joint symposium in Washington, DC to consider the current state of population health science in the United States. At the symposium, speakers and participants reviewed the status of population health in the United States, including current trends in health and mortality, and racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities; explored the complexities of policy implementation with attention to evidence generation and to surfacing and mitigating negative unintended consequences of policies for population health; and shared perspectives on finding common ground to move population health forward. This publication summarizes the presentation and discussion of the workshop.

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