Aging, Major Life Transitions, and Suicide Risk

Old and young female hands are holding, elderly care and respect, close-up.

Briana Mezuk, Sarah Burgard Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the US, with over 42,000 cases annually. There is an urgent need to identify modifiable risk factors that can inform public health prevention strategies. This research seeks to leverage and integrate several existing datasets to support novel secondary analyses aimed at identifying… Continue reading Aging, Major Life Transitions, and Suicide Risk

Long-Term Mobility and Wellbeing of New Orleans Residents after Hurricane Katrina

New Orleans Street Cars in Canal Street

Narayan Sastry Two key tasks will be undertaken at the University of Michigan as part of this project. First, we will collaborate with the Elizabeth Fussell and other staff at Brown University as well as with staff at the U.S. Census Bureau to design and implement the analysis of linked data from the Decennial Census,… Continue reading Long-Term Mobility and Wellbeing of New Orleans Residents after Hurricane Katrina

Improving Learning: Developing Measures of Accountability and Evaluating their Association with Students’ Gains in Achievement in Nepal

High altitude himalayan town of Ngawal with Annapurna mountain range in the distance. Shot on a sunny fall day

Dirgha Ghimire This project aims to develop and validate measures of accountability to be shared with the Nepal Ministry of Education (MOE), local stakeholders and scientific communities, and to use those measures in an analysis of the determinants of accountability and its association with students’ gains in achievement. The proposed study will build on the… Continue reading Improving Learning: Developing Measures of Accountability and Evaluating their Association with Students’ Gains in Achievement in Nepal

Economic distress and growing educational disparities in life expectancy: Weathering, high effort coping, and despair

Newborn hand in adult palm. Black and white concept

Arline T. Geronimus Researchers have used a variety of data sources and methodologies to independently document two disturbing trends: a halt to universal gains in life expectancy (LE) across US subpopulations, and a subsequent rise in educational inequality in LE since 1990—both of which take us further from achieving the high-priority national public health objective… Continue reading Economic distress and growing educational disparities in life expectancy: Weathering, high effort coping, and despair

Understanding the Connections among Genes, Environment, Family Processes, and Mental Health

Depressed man standing alone on a jetty on a foggy autumn day.

William G. Axinn Psychiatric disorders are the leading source of disability worldwide and affect 53% of the U.S. population. In addition to the individual suffering they entail, disabilities associated with these disorders may have substantial consequences for family and health outcomes. This includes long-term consequences for family formation and dissolution behaviors. Dissecting the relationship among… Continue reading Understanding the Connections among Genes, Environment, Family Processes, and Mental Health

Scientific and Technical Core

Brady T. West A sub-project of Michigan Research Infrastructure for Population Sciences– The objective of the Scientific and Technical Core (STC) is to advance the overarching objective of this P2C proposal – to design, create, and use new data to advance population science – by enhancing methods used for all three activities, and by providing… Continue reading Scientific and Technical Core

Effects of Financial Sanctions in the Criminal Justice System

Teen boy behind fence confinement, boarding school restrictions, broken future

Michael Mueller-Smith The use of legal financial obligations, colloquially referred to as financial sanctions, imposed on individuals who come into contact with the criminal justice system is widespread and growing in the U.S. criminal justice system. These fees and fines could generate serious social and economic consequences, particularly among low-income populations who are unable to pay… Continue reading Effects of Financial Sanctions in the Criminal Justice System

Zhao,Wei

Wei Zhao is a Research Assistant Professor at the Survey Research Center in the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan (UM) and is affiliated with the Center for Social Epidemiology and Population Health (CSEPH), the Michigan Center on the Demography of Aging (MiCDA), the Eisenberg Family Depression Center, and the UM Precision… Continue reading Zhao,Wei

Raju,Medha

Medha Raju joined the BioSocial Methods Collaborative as the HomeLab Research Design Specialist in 2022. She graduated from the University of Chicago with a MA in Social Sciences (Psychology concentration). She holds a BA in Social Sciences and a MA in Regulatory Governance from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. Medha is interested in… Continue reading Raju,Medha

A New Population-Scale Approach for the Study of Psychological Stress in the Transition to Adulthood

A woman suffering from deep depression, thinking about her problems, lying on

This project pioneers a new protocol for self-collection of hair samples for large, population representative samples of individuals. Hair will be used to assess cortisol levels (a biomarker for psychological stress) among a large cohort of those experiencing the transition to adulthood. Panel data will be used to establish selection bias in the success of… Continue reading A New Population-Scale Approach for the Study of Psychological Stress in the Transition to Adulthood