FN Clarivate Analytics Web of Science VR 1.0 PT J AU Gysels, M Evans, N Menaca, A Andrew, EVW Bausewein, C Gastmans, C Gomez-Batiste, X Gunaratnam, Y Husebo, S Toscani, F Higginson, IJ Harding, R Pool, R AF Gysels, Marjolein Evans, Natalie Menaca, Arantza Andrew, Erin V. W. Bausewein, Claudia Gastmans, Chris Gomez-Batiste, Xavier Gunaratnam, Yasmin Husebo, Stein Toscani, Franco Higginson, Irene J. Harding, Richard Pool, Robert CA Project PRISMA TI Culture Is a Priority for Research in End-of-Life Care in Europe: A Research Agenda SO JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT LA English DT Article DE End-of-life care; palliative care; research priorities; Europe; culture; collaboration ID CORE OUTCOME MEASURE; PALLIATIVE CARE; VALIDATION; CANCER; PERSPECTIVE; COMPETENCE; ADVANCE; PEOPLE; WHITE; HOMES AB Context. Culture has a profound influence on our understanding of what is appropriate care for patients at the end of life (EoL), but the evidence base is largely nonexistent. Objectives. An international workshop was organized to compile a research agenda for cultural issues in EoL research, and assess challenges and implications of the integration of the culture concept in different contexts. Methods. Participant experts were identified from the expert network established through an Internet-based call for expertise on culture and EoL care and from meetings. The workshop comprised presentations of research priorities from country and disciplinary perspectives, and group discussions. Analysis used all data gathered in the workshop and applied standard qualitative techniques. Results. Thirty experts participated in the workshop and identified the following priorities for cross-cultural research: 1) clarifying the concepts of culture and cultural competence; 2) defining EoL in a context of social and cultural diversity, with a focus on concepts of EoL care and bioethics, experiences of receiving and giving EoL care, and care practices in different settings; and 3) developing appropriate methodologies and outcome measurements that address diversity. Conclusion. This first pan-European meeting compiled a research agenda, identifying key areas for future research focusing on culture, diversity, and their operationalization. This requires international and multidisciplinary collaboration, which is necessary in the current efforts to synthesize best practices in EoL care. J Pain Symptom Manage 2012; 44: 285-294. (C) 2012 U.S. Cancer Pain Relief Committee. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. C1 [Gysels, Marjolein] Univ Barcelona, Hosp Clin, Barcelona Ctr Int Hlth Res CRESIB, E-08036 Barcelona, Spain. [Gysels, Marjolein; Bausewein, Claudia; Higginson, Irene J.; Harding, Richard] Kings Coll London, Guys Hosp, Cicely Saunders Inst, Dept Palliat Care Policy & Rehabil,Sch Med, London WC2R 2LS, England. [Gysels, Marjolein; Bausewein, Claudia; Higginson, Irene J.; Harding, Richard] Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst, Kings Hosp, Dept Palliat Care Policy & Rehabil,Sch Med, London WC2R 2LS, England. [Gysels, Marjolein; Bausewein, Claudia; Higginson, Irene J.; Harding, Richard] Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst, St Thomas Hosp, Dept Palliat Care Policy & Rehabil,Sch Med, London WC2R 2LS, England. [Gastmans, Chris] Catholic Univ Louvain, Fac Med, Ctr Biomed Eth & Law, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium. [Gomez-Batiste, Xavier] WHO Collaborating Ctr Palliat Care Publ Hlth Prog, Qualy Observ, Lhospitalet De Llobregat, Spain. [Gunaratnam, Yasmin] Univ London, Dept Sociol, London, England. [Husebo, Stein] Dign Ctr, Bergen, Norway. [Toscani, Franco] Ist Ric Med Palliat, Fdn Lino Maestroni, Cremona, Italy. [Pool, Robert] Univ Amsterdam, Ctr Global Hlth & Inequal, Amsterdam, Netherlands. C3 ISGlobal; CRESIB; University of Barcelona; Hospital Clinic de Barcelona; Guy's & St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust; University of London; King's College London; King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; King's College Hospital; University of London; King's College London; Guy's & St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust; University of London; King's College London; Universite Catholique Louvain; University of London; University of Amsterdam RP Gysels, M (corresponding author), Univ Barcelona, Hosp Clin, Barcelona Ctr Int Hlth Res CRESIB, Rossello 132 Sobre Atico, E-08036 Barcelona, Spain. EM marjolein.gysels@cresib.cat RI Gastmans, Chris/GWZ-3728-2022; Daveson, Barbara A/G-3122-2012; Evans, Natalie/M-1631-2013; Bausewein, Claudia/C-3239-2009; Haugen, Dagny R. Faksvåg/AAX-7989-2021; Gastmans, Chris/Y-5504-2019; Higginson, Irene Julie/C-7309-2012; Murtagh, Fliss/C-3216-2009 OI Evans, Natalie/0000-0001-7124-9282; Gastmans, Chris/0000-0002-5522-0639; Higginson, Irene Julie/0000-0002-3687-1313; Murtagh, Fliss/0000-0003-1289-3726; Haugen, Dagny Faksvag/0000-0002-8592-4995; Deliens, Luc/0000-0002-8158-2422; Koffman, Jonathan/0000-0001-8513-5681; Bausewein, Claudia/0000-0002-0958-3041; Daveson, Barbara/0000-0001-8039-8749; Harding, Richard/0000-0001-9653-8689 FU European Commission [Health-F2-2008-201655] FX PRISMA is funded by the European Commission's Seventh Framework Program (contract number: Health-F2-2008-201655) with the overall aim to coordinate high-quality international research into EoL cancer care. PRISMA aims to provide evidence and guidance on best practice to ensure that research can measure and improve outcomes for patients and families. PRISMA activities aim to reflect the preferences and cultural diversities of citizens, the clinical priorities of clinicians, and appropriately measure multidimensional outcomes across settings where EoL care is delivered. The principal investigator is R. H. and the scientific director is I. J. H. In recognition of the collaborative nature of PRISMA, the authors thank the following PRISMA members: Gwenda Albers, Barbara Antunes, Ana Barros Pinto, Dorothee Bechinger-English, Hamid Benalia, Lucy Bradley, Lucas Ceulemans, Barbara A. Daveson, Luc Deliens, Noel Derycke, Martine de Vlieger, Let Dillen, Julia Downing, Michael Echteld, Dagny Faksvag Haugen, Lindsay Flood, Nancy Gikaara, Barbara Gomes, Sue Hall, Stein Kaasa, Jonathan Koffman, Pedro Lopes Ferreira, Johan Menten, Natalia Monteiro Calanzani, Fliss Murtagh, Bregje Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Roeline Pasman, Francesca Pettenati, Tony Powell, Miel Ribbe, Katrin Sigurdardottir, Steffen Simon, Franco Toscani, Bart van den Eynden, Jenny van der Steen, Paul Vanden Berghe, and Trudie van Iersel. 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Pain Symptom Manage. PD AUG PY 2012 VL 44 IS 2 BP 285 EP 294 DI 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2011.09.013 PG 10 WC Health Care Sciences & Services; Medicine, General & Internal; Clinical Neurology WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Health Care Sciences & Services; General & Internal Medicine; Neurosciences & Neurology GA 996WG UT WOS:000308124900011 PM 22672921 OA Bronze, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Zhai, GF Suzuki, T AF Zhai, Guofang Suzuki, Takeshi TI Risk perception in Northeast Asia SO ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT LA English DT Article DE Risk perception; Multi-country survey; Principal component analysis; Northeast Asia ID CROSS-CULTURAL DIFFERENCES; CHINESE; JAPAN AB Multi-country surveys of the public's perception of risk using the same questionnaire were sequentially implemented from April to December 2006 in Japan, China, and South Korea. Statistical analyses, such as traditional mean tests, rank order tests, two-step cluster analysis, and principal component analysis were used to analyze the survey data. The results revealed that Chinese tend to be more tolerant of risk than Japanese and South Koreans. In all three countries, the threats of global warming, cancer, traffic accidents, and fire were perceived as higher-order risks, while infectious diseases and threats from high technology were perceived as lower-order risks. Looking across the entire multi-country sample, we found that Chinese participants perceived greater risk in typhoons, SARS, and drugs; Japanese saw greater risk from gas explosions and potential threats coming over the Internet; while people in all three countries identified earthquakes as a primary risk. These differences in risk perception reflect the natural and socioeconomic conditions in the three countries. Although the study did not emphasize differences in risk perception within countries based on demographic factors such as education, age, and gender, we found that differences based on education and age tended to be greater in China and South Korea than in Japan. We also found that men perceived greater risks than women in China and South Korea, while in Japan it was the opposite with women perceiving greater risks. A comparison of these results with previous studies reveals a bias in past studies toward student samples and indicates the need for more representative samples in multi-country surveys. C1 [Zhai, Guofang] Nanjing Univ, Sino French Ctr Urban Reg & Planning Studies, Nanjing 210093, Peoples R China. [Zhai, Guofang] Nanjing Univ, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Nanjing 210093, Peoples R China. [Zhai, Guofang; Suzuki, Takeshi] Minist Land Infrastruct & Transport, Natl Inst Land & Infrastruct Management, Yokosuka, Kanagawa 2390826, Japan. 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PD OCT PY 2009 VL 157 IS 1-4 BP 151 EP 167 DI 10.1007/s10661-008-0524-y PG 17 WC Environmental Sciences WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology GA 495IH UT WOS:000269883900015 PM 18841489 OA Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Shumanov, M Cooper, H Ewing, M AF Shumanov, Michael Cooper, Holly Ewing, Mike TI Using AI predicted personality to enhance advertising effectiveness SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MARKETING LA English DT Article DE Personality; Advertising; Artificial intelligence; Machine learning; Personality traits ID CROSS-CULTURAL GENERALIZABILITY; ALTERNATIVE 5-FACTOR MODEL; ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT; ARTIFICIAL-INTELLIGENCE; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; MEDIATING ROLE; TRAITS; DIMENSIONS; WORK; SIMILARITY AB Purpose The purpose of this study is twofold: first to demonstrate the application of an algorithm using contextual data to ascertain consumer personality traits; and second to explore the factors impacting the relationship between personality traits and advertisement persuasiveness. Design/methodology/approach A mixed-method approach that comprises two distinct yet complementary studies. The first uses quantitative methods and is based on a sample of 35,264 retail banking customers. Study 2 explores the findings that emerge from Study 1 using qualitative methods. Findings This paper finds that matching consumer personality with congruent advertising messages can lead to more effective consumer persuasion for most personality types. For consumers who exhibit neurotic personality traits, ameliorating perceived risks during purchasing and providing cues for social acceptance and goal attainment are important factors for advertising effectiveness. These factors also had a positive impact on the purchasing behaviour of extroverted consumers. Research limitations/implications This research focusses on understanding purchasing behaviour based on the most dominant personality trait. However, people are likely to exhibit a combination of most or even all of the Big Five personality traits. Practical implications Building on advances in natural language processing, enabling the identification of personality from language, this study demonstrates the possibility of influencing consumer behaviour by matching machine inferred personality to congruent persuasive advertising. It is one of the few studies to use contextual instead of social media data to capture individual personality. Such data serves to capture an authentic rather than contrived persona. Further, the study identifies the factors that may moderate this relationship and thereby provides an explanation of why some personality traits exhibit differences in purchasing behaviour from those that are anticipated by existing theory. Originality/value Although the idea that people are more likely to be responsive to advertising messages that are congruent with their personality type has already been successfully applied by advertising practitioners and documented by advertising scholars, this study extends existing research by identifying the factors that may moderate this relationship and thereby provides an explanation why some personality traits may exhibit differences in purchasing behaviour from those that are anticipated by existing theory. C1 [Shumanov, Michael] Swinburne Univ Technol, Dept Business Technol & Entrepreneurship, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. [Cooper, Holly; Ewing, Mike] Deakin Univ, Dept Mkt, Geelong, Vic, Australia. C3 Swinburne University of Technology; Deakin University RP Shumanov, M (corresponding author), Swinburne Univ Technol, Dept Business Technol & Entrepreneurship, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. 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YM, 2018, J BUS RES, V85, P155, DOI 10.1016/j.jbusres.2017.12.036 Yarkoni T, 2010, J RES PERS, V44, P363, DOI 10.1016/j.jrp.2010.04.001 Young HR, 2018, J ORGAN BEHAV, V39, P1330, DOI 10.1002/job.2303 NR 84 TC 9 Z9 9 U1 11 U2 84 PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD PI BINGLEY PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND SN 0309-0566 EI 1758-7123 J9 EUR J MARKETING JI Eur. J. Market. PD JUN 7 PY 2022 VL 56 IS 6 SI SI BP 1590 EP 1609 DI 10.1108/EJM-12-2019-0941 EA APR 2021 PG 20 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA 1U5IM UT WOS:000637811700001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Li, Y Dong, FH Bullock, LFC Liu, YH Bloom, T AF Li, Yang Dong, Fanghong Bullock, Linda F. C. Liu, Yuhui Bloom, Tina TI "It Never Goes Away": Chinese Immigrant Women's Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence SO PSYCHOLOGY OF VIOLENCE LA English DT Article DE intimate partner violence; Chinese immigrant women; culture; immigration; qualitative study ID HEALTH CONSEQUENCES; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; RISK-FACTORS; ABUSE; PREVALENCE; COMMUNITY; HELP AB Objective: Very little research has been conducted on intimate partner violence (IPV) against Chinese immigrant women living in the United States, including qualitative explorations of the lived experiences of IPV among Chinese immigrant survivors. This study presents Chinese immigrant women's experiences of IPV and its mental health consequences, with a focus on the roles of traditional culture, immigration, and acculturation in survivors' experiences. Method: Phone interviews were conducted with 20 Chinese immigrant women living in the United States who had experienced IPV during the past year. Participants' mean age was 29 years; they were recruited via social network sites. Results: Almost all participants reported emotional abuse, three reported physical violence, and one reported sexual violence. They experienced "cold violence" frequently, and they described how IPV tortured them mentally. The women shared their thoughts on how their experiences of IPV were shaped by traditional Chinese patriarchal family structure, immigration, financial and legal dependence on their abuser, adjustment to life in the United States, and social isolation. Conclusions: There is a need for further research on the prevalence, causes, and consequences of "cold violence" and the development and validation of measures for this type of abuse. It is important to consider culture, immigration, and acculturation in services for Chinese immigrant women who experience IPV. Culturally appropriate, accessible services are needed to meet these women's needs. C1 [Li, Yang] Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, 1710 Red River St,3-446, Austin, TX 78712 USA. [Dong, Fanghong] Hebei Univ, Sch Nursing, Baoding, Peoples R China. [Bullock, Linda F. C.] Univ Missouri, Sch Nursing, Columbia, MO USA. [Liu, Yuhui] Univ Missouri, Trulaske Coll Business, Columbia, MO USA. [Bloom, Tina] Notre Dame Maryland Univ, Sch Nursing, Baltimore, MD USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; Hebei University; University of Missouri System; University of Missouri Columbia; University of Missouri System; University of Missouri Columbia RP Li, Y (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, 1710 Red River St,3-446, Austin, TX 78712 USA. EM yang.li@nursing.utexas.edu OI Dong, Fanghong/0000-0001-6696-5196 CR Ahmad F, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P613, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.06.011 [Anonymous], 2012, WHORHR1236 Budiman A, 2020, KEY FINDINGS US IMMI Campbell JC, 2002, LANCET, V359, P1331, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(02)08336-8 Crandall M, 2005, J INTERPERS VIOLENCE, V20, P941, DOI 10.1177/0886260505277679 Dasgupta S. 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Violence PD MAR PY 2022 VL 12 IS 2 BP 74 EP 83 DI 10.1037/vio0000400 EA NOV 2021 PG 10 WC Psychology, Clinical; Criminology & Penology; Family Studies WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Criminology & Penology; Family Studies GA ZA1XM UT WOS:000733016200001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Hartman, SJ Dunsiger, SI Bock, BC Larsen, BA Linke, S Pekmezi, D Marquez, B Gans, KM Mendoza-Vasconez, AS Marcus, BH AF Hartman, Sheri J. Dunsiger, Shira I. Bock, Beth C. Larsen, Britta A. Linke, Sarah Pekmezi, Dori Marquez, Becky Gans, Kim M. Mendoza-Vasconez, Andrea S. Marcus, Bess H. TI Physical activity maintenance among Spanish-speaking Latinas in a randomized controlled trial of an Internet-based intervention SO JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE LA English DT Article DE Physical activity maintenance; Spanish-speaking Latinas; Internet; Technology; Behavioral intervention; Public health ID SEAMOS-SALUDABLES; LINE FINDINGS; EXERCISE; BEHAVIOR; ADULTS; ACCULTURATION; RATIONALE; COLLEGE; DESIGN; HEALTH AB Spanish-speaking Latinas have some of the lowest rates of meeting physical activity guidelines in the U.S. and are at high risk for many related chronic diseases. The purpose of the current study was to examine the maintenance of a culturally and individually-tailored Internet-based physical activity intervention for Spanish-speaking Latinas. Inactive Latinas (N = 205) were randomly assigned to a 6-month Tailored Physical Activity Internet Intervention or a Wellness Contact Control Internet Group, with a 6-month follow-up. Maintenance was measured by assessing group differences in minutes per week of self-reported and accelerometer measured moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) at 12 months after baseline and changes in MVPA between the end of the active intervention (month 6) and the end of the study (month 12). Potential moderators of the intervention were also examined. Data were collected between 2011 and 2014, and were analyzed in 2015 at the University of California, San Diego. The Intervention Group engaged in significantly more minutes of MVPA per week than the Control Group at the end of the maintenance period for both self-reported (mean diff. = 30.68, SE = 11.27, p = .007) and accelerometer measured (mean diff. = 11.47, SE = 3.19, p = .01) MVPA. There were no significant between- or within-group changes in MVPA from month 6 to 12. Greater intervention effects were seen for those with lower BMI (BMI x intervention = -6.67, SE = 2.88, p = .02) and lower perceived places to walk to in their neighborhood (access x intervention = -43.25, SE = 19.07, p = .02), with a trend for less family support (social support x intervention = -3.49, SE = 2.05, p = .08). Acculturation, health literacy, and physical activity related psychosocial variables were not significant moderators of the intervention effect during the maintenance period. Findings from the current study support the efficacy of an Internet-delivered individually tailored intervention for maintenance of MVPA gains over time. C1 [Hartman, Sheri J.; Larsen, Britta A.; Linke, Sarah; Marquez, Becky; Mendoza-Vasconez, Andrea S.; Marcus, Bess H.] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Family Med & Publ Hlth, 3855 Hlth Sci Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA. [Dunsiger, Shira I.; Bock, Beth C.] Miriam Hosp, Ctr Behav & Prevent Med, Dept Psychiat & Human Behav, Providence, RI 02906 USA. [Dunsiger, Shira I.; Bock, Beth C.] Brown Univ, Warren Alpert Med Sch, Providence, RI 02912 USA. [Pekmezi, Dori] Univ Alabama Birmingham, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Behav, Birmingham, AL 35294 USA. [Gans, Kim M.] Brown Univ, Dept Behav & Social Sci, Providence, RI 02912 USA. [Gans, Kim M.] Brown Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Inst Community Hlth Promot, Providence, RI 02912 USA. C3 University of California System; University of California San Diego; Lifespan Health Rhode Island; Miriam Hospital; Brown University; University of Alabama System; University of Alabama Birmingham; Brown University; Brown University RP Hartman, SJ (corresponding author), Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Family Med & Publ Hlth, 3855 Hlth Sci Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA. 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PD JUN PY 2017 VL 40 IS 3 BP 392 EP 402 DI 10.1007/s10865-016-9800-4 PG 11 WC Psychology, Clinical WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA ET3RP UT WOS:000400197500002 PM 27752866 OA Green Published, Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Li, JQ Liu, X Wei, TL Lan, W AF Li, Jia Qi Liu, Xun Wei, Tianlan Lan, William TI Acculturation, Internet Use, and Psychological Well-being Among Chinese International Students SO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS LA English DT Article DE Acculturation; Internet use; Psychological well-being; Chinese international students ID SELF-ESTEEM; IDENTITY; ADJUSTMENT; ADAPTATION; DEPRESSION; IMMIGRANTS; SCALE; COMMUNICATION; LONELINESS; STRESS AB In this study, the authors examined the relationships of acculturation as measured with two subscales of cultural maintenance and cultural assimilation, Internet use, and psychological wellbeing among Chinese international students. 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Int. Students PD JUN PY 2013 VL 3 IS 2 BP 155 EP 166 PG 12 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA VA3LY UT WOS:000409809800007 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Longo, B AF Longo, Bernadette TI R U There? Cell Phones, Participatory Design, and Intercultural Dialogue SO IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION LA English DT Article DE Information and communication technologies (ICTs); intercultural design; mobile phones; participatory design; sub-Saharan Africa ID INTERNET AB Background: This case recounts my experiences during a four-year participatory design project with colleagues in Katanga Province of the Democratic Republic of Congo, where I attempted to develop a system for people working in rural areas to share business information via mobile phones. Research questions: For the first phase of this project: How do businesspeople in Katanga Province use their cell phones to support their business operations? How do they want to use these phones in their businesses? How do their use and attitudes compare with those of graduate students at a Midwestern US university? For the second phase of this project: Can a cell-phone delivered information system be designed for artisanal miners and small farmers in Katanga Province to share local pricing information for copper, cobalt, and maize? Situating the case: Researchers in participatory design for social and/or technological change have traditionally assumed that including users in early design phases will result in democratization of project outcomes. When these participatory design projects are situated in intercultural settings, however, they are complicated by political and economic conditions, as well as differences in values and social relations. Because participatory design relies on dialogue within robust, multimodal communication networks, weaknesses in this approach arise when trusted social relations are not in place upon which to build these multimodal communication networks. Cases of participatory design between colleagues in the US and Sub-Saharan Africa illustrate profound effects of political and economic inequities on participatory design projects. Methodology: This is an experience report of a project that developed initially from a classroom project in which my students in the US conducted a communication audit for a partner based in Katanga Province in the Democratic Republic of Congo. A US-based nongovernmental organization (NGO) arranged the partnership and I later went to the field to carry out this project. About the case: Working with an NGO while based exclusively in the US, we attempted to develop a system from which people working in rural areas could share business information, such as reporting business conditions in a rural location back to the NGO's Lubumbashi headquarters 75 km away, via mobile phones. The project did not work because people in Katanga were not familiar with the information design issues involved in the system and I was not familiar with the actual business situation at the NGO in Katanga. To address these issues, I traveled to the Democratic Republic of Congo and interviewed NGO staff and clients. But my presence in the NGO's Lubumbashi headquarters created irreparable social disruption. I continued the project with a new client in Katanga and revised goals for the information-sharing system, but that system, too, did not work for lack of a trusted social network of informants to participate in the information-sharing system. In the end, I was only able to complete an initial analysis of the needs. Conclusions: Despite the need to abandon the project, this case raised these questions about participatory design for information and communication technologies (ICT) projects when collaborators do not "speak the same language:" How can communication researchers effectively build trusted relationships with colleagues in developing nations in order to facilitate successful participatory design projects? Given the research obligations and reward structures at US universities, is it feasible for communication researchers to spend the time to build trusted relationships with colleagues in developing nations, which may not yield publishable research or quantifiable results for three years or more? Given the political and social conditions in many developing areas, can communication researchers rely on the stable conditions and personal relations that are necessary to conduct participatory design for ICT projects? 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Prof. Commun. PD SEP PY 2014 VL 57 IS 3 BP 204 EP 215 DI 10.1109/TPC.2014.2341437 PG 12 WC Communication; Engineering, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Engineering GA AP0SJ UT WOS:000341773900003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Khoir, S Du, JT AF Khoir, Safirotu Du, Jia Tina TI The States of Uncertainty and Confidence of Asian Immigrants during Their Settlement in South Australia SO JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALIAN LIBRARY AND INFORMATION ASSOCIATION LA English DT Article DE Migration; uncertainty; confidence; public libraries; social capital; social inclusion ID PUBLIC-LIBRARIES; SOCIAL MEDIA; ACCULTURATION; INTEGRATION; PSYCHOLOGY; COMMUNITY; LITERACY; MIGRANT AB Migrating to a new land is not always easy and smooth although preparations have been made to tackle challenges ahead. This paper discusses the instances of uncertainty and confidence faced by Asians and associated life experiences as they migrated to Australia, acknowledging the important roles of public libraries. The study collected 197 survey questionnaires, 258 photos, and 35 post-photo interviews. The data were analysed by using descriptive analysis, participatory analysis, and open coding. A process model was developed to illustrate the connections between uncertainty and confidence experienced by Asian immigrants and the generation of social capital, and social inclusion in their migration journey. C1 [Khoir, Safirotu] Univ Gadjah Mada, Main Lib, Yogyakarta, Indonesia. [Khoir, Safirotu] Univ Gadjah Mada, Grad Sch Lib & Informat Management, Yogyakarta, Indonesia. [Du, Jia Tina] Univ South Australia, Sch Informat Technol & Math Sci, Adelaide, SA, Australia. C3 Gadjah Mada University; Gadjah Mada University; University of South Australia RP Khoir, S (corresponding author), Univ Gadjah Mada, Bulaksumur 16, Yogyakarta, Indonesia. EM safirotu@ugm.ac.id RI Olson, Anna/HGB-9512-2022; Khoir, Safirotu/K-5333-2017; Du, Jia Tina/D-1460-2010 OI Khoir, Safirotu/0000-0003-0992-4480; Du, Jia Tina/0000-0002-3243-5768 CR Adekeye O, 2014, J HEALTH CARE POOR U, V25, P1730, DOI 10.1353/hpu.2014.0183 Albrecht S, 2017, QUAL REP, V22, P2385 [Anonymous], 2014, ICONFERENCE 2014 P H [Anonymous], 2004, TRENDS IMPACTS MIGRA [Anonymous], 2013, SKILLED MIGRANT WOME [Anonymous], 2009, ORIGINS MEANING DEFI Australia Bureau of Statistics, 2017, BAS COMM PROF S AUST Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2017, CENS POP HOUS Beretta P, 2018, J AUST LIB INF ASSOC, V67, P373, DOI 10.1080/24750158.2018.1531677 Berry JW, 2001, J SOC ISSUES, V57, P615, DOI 10.1111/0022-4537.00231 Burnett L., 1998, RES SERIES, V10 Caidi N, 2020, INFORM PROCESS MANAG, V57, DOI 10.1016/j.ipm.2019.102111 Caidi N, 2014, LIBRES, V24, P118 Caidi N, 2010, ANNU REV INFORM SCI, V44, P493 Cairncross F., 1997, DEATH DISTANCE Cameron R, 2011, J ECON SOC POLICY, V14 Carleton RN, 2010, PSYCHOL ASSESSMENT, V22, P396, DOI 10.1037/a0019230 Case DO, 2016, STUD INFORM, DOI DOI 10.1108/S2055-53772016 Chatterjee S., 2009, INT BUSINESS EC RES, V8, P1 Chen WH, 2015, AM BEHAV SCI, V59, P977, DOI 10.1177/0002764215580609 Chin KS, 2015, GLOBAL NETW, V15, P78, DOI 10.1111/glob.12053 Chuang SC, 2013, INT J PSYCHOL, V48, P660, DOI 10.1080/00207594.2012.666553 Creswell J. 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Aust. Libr. Inf. Assoc. PD APR 2 PY 2020 VL 69 IS 2 BP 149 EP 175 DI 10.1080/24750158.2020.1746062 EA MAY 2020 PG 27 WC Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Information Science & Library Science GA NJ7AK UT WOS:000533228400001 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Rusnakova, V Bacharova, L Simo, J Krcmeryova, T Finka, M Kovac, R AF Rusnakova, V Bacharova, L. Simo, J. Krcmeryova, T. Finka, M. Kovac, R. TI Integration of the e-Learning into the medical university curricula SO BRATISLAVA MEDICAL JOURNAL-BRATISLAVSKE LEKARSKE LISTY LA English DT Article DE e-Learning; university education; healthcare; quality management; professional ethics ID QUALITY IMPROVEMENT AB Objectives: The aim of this contribution was to present the e-Learning introduction in the Slovak Medical University (SMU) with a focus on the implementation phase of the two blended courses Healthcare Quality and Healthcare Professionals' Ethics. Background: The introduction of the e-Learning was realized during the period 2008-2009 in the partnership of SMU and IBM Company, following strictly the project management approach. Methods: The development of the e-module beta-versions was evaluated by the modules' authors using a structured interview. In a consequent pilot testing, the blended courses were evaluated by 23 students of the bachelor program in Rescue health care, and by 61 public health students at the master level program, respectively, using the standardized questionnaires. Results: The tangible results included the documented SMU strategy for the e-Learning integration, six e-Learning modules and evaluation results. The authors' evaluation showed high scores for the experience in collaboration with IBM, as well as for the experience with the LMS environment. The students' evaluation showed a high acceptance of the e-Learning by both part-time and full-time students. The access to Internet was not recognized as a serious barrier. Conclusion: The first experience with the integration of the e-Learning into the curricula of the Slovak Medical University showed the advantage of the systematic approach. The experience with developing the strategy in an interdisciplinary/ intercultural team, the knowledge about specific characteristics of distance learning by the involved SMU staff, and the know-how and skills represented the important benefits. It was demonstrated that the blended learning is recommended as optimal for the education in medical environment (Tab. 4, Fig. 1, Ref. 22). Full Text in PDF www.elis.sk. C1 [Rusnakova, V; Krcmeryova, T.] Slovak Med Univ, Fac Nursing & Hlth Profess Studies, SK-83303 Bratislava, Slovakia. [Bacharova, L.] Int Laser Ctr, Bratislava, Slovakia. [Simo, J.; Finka, M.] IBM Slovakia, Bratislava, Slovakia. [Kovac, R.] Slovak Med Univ, Fac Publ Hlth, SK-83303 Bratislava, Slovakia. C3 Slovak Medical University Bratislava; Slovak Medical University Bratislava RP Rusnakova, V (corresponding author), Slovak Med Univ, Fac Nursing & Hlth Profess Studies, Limbova 12, SK-83303 Bratislava, Slovakia. 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Med. J. PY 2012 VL 113 IS 5 BP 324 EP 330 DI 10.4149/BLL_2012_075 PG 7 WC Medicine, General & Internal WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC General & Internal Medicine GA 952LV UT WOS:000304794900014 PM 22616595 OA Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Brocke, CV AF Brocke, Christina vom TI How to Leverage Virtual Learning Communities for Teaching Agile Communication Skills? The eGroups Case at the University of Munster in Germany and Massey University in New Zealand SO KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT & E-LEARNING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL LA English DT Article DE Virtual Learning Communities; Evolving Cooperations; Agile Communication; eGroups; Languages for Specific Purposes; Intercultural Communication; Higher Education AB Global business life nowadays is marked by quickly evolving forms of cooperation. These are often set in virtual space where various members from different countries are brought together in order to collaborate. This trend calls for specific abilities in communication that respond to the challenges evoked by the ever evolving and newly forming nature of international virtual project teams. In this paper, these abilities are called "agile communication skills". The paper reports on the conceptualisation and implementation of a Virtual Learning Community (VLC) in a longitude study designed to foster socalled "agile communication skills". Our research presents an approach where VLCs are used in order to create authentic evolving cooperations between students. For this matter internet technology seemed to prove as a key enabler. However, the mere use of technology does not suffice on its own. We, thus, identified design principles of VLCs that appear to be critical factors for successfully implementing such communities. We applied design-oriented research by grounding our model in prior work and formatively evaluating it in multiple case studies over a period of two years. In this paper we present the matured model and show what features characterise an eLearning environment to teach agile communication skills in a university setting. In addition we report on evaluating this model in a real-life application scenarios by giving illustrating examples from the final case study between the players involved: the Massey University in New Zealand and the University of Munster in Germany. C1 [Brocke, Christina vom] Univ Teachers Educ PHGR, Chur, Switzerland. RP Brocke, CV (corresponding author), Univ Teachers Educ PHGR, Chur, Switzerland. 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Manag. E-Learn. PD DEC PY 2011 VL 3 IS 4 BP 644 EP 664 PG 21 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA VB4NS UT WOS:000415489400009 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kramsch, C AF Kramsch, Claire TI Language and Culture SO AILA REVIEW LA English DT Article ID GLOBALIZATION; CLASSROOM; AGE AB This paper surveys the research methods and approaches used in the multidisciplinary field of applied language studies or language education over the last fourty years. Drawing on insights gained in psycho-and sociolinguistics, educational linguistics and linguistic anthropology with regard to language and culture, it is organized around five major questions that concern language educators. The first is: How is cultural meaning encoded in the linguistic sign? It discusses how the use of a symbolic system affects thought, how speakers of different languages think differently when speaking, and how speakers of different discourses (across language or in the same language) have different cultural worldviews. The second question is: How is cultural meaning expressed pragmatically through verbal action? It discusses the realization of speech acts across cultures, culturally-inflected conversation analysis, and the use of cultural frames. The third question is: How is culture co-constructed by participants in interaction? It discusses how applied linguistics has moved from a structuralist to a constructivist view of language and culture, from performance to performativity, and from a focus on culture to a focus on historicity and subjectivity. The fourth question is: How is research on language and culture affected by language technologies? The print culture of the book, the virtual culture of the Internet, the online culture of electronic exchanges all have their own ways of redrawing the boundaries of what may be said, written and done within a given discourse community. They are inextricably linked to issues of power and control. The last section explores the current methodological trends in the study of language and culture: the increased questioning and politicization of cultural reality, the increased interdisciplinary nature of research, the growing importance of reflexivity, and the noticeable convergence of intercultural communication studies and applied language studies in the study of language and culture. RP Kramsch, C (corresponding author), 1201 Shattuck Ave, Berkeley, CA 94709 USA. 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PY 2014 VL 27 IS 1 BP 30 EP 55 DI 10.1075/aila.27.02kra PG 26 WC Linguistics WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Linguistics GA V5O4G UT WOS:000219792500003 OA Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT S AU Lian, A Sussex, R AF Lian, Andrew Sussex, Roland BE Curtis, A Sussex, R TI Toward a Critical Epistemology for Learning Languages and Cultures in Twenty-First Century Asia SO INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION IN ASIA: EDUCATION, LANGUAGE AND VALUES SE Multilingual Education LA English DT Article; Book Chapter AB The adoption of English as the working language of Asia and the ASEAN region, together with an increase in the mobility of people and information, are creating new and significant pressures on language and culture education in English, as well as other languages, in the region. It is also bringing about an enormously expanded use of English between speakers for whom English is not a first language, and this expansion includes communication in English between people of different cultural backgrounds. The surge in the use of English highlights a number of current challenges. English language proficiency levels vary widely across Asia. Communicative competence in English as a second language is at least equally problematic. The matter is further complicated by the growth of the Internet and other technological progress, which has resulted in the creation of a self-managing, often Do-it-Yourself society engaged in "just-in-time" rather than "just-in-case" activity, as in the past. These considerations call for new learning/teaching approaches which go beyond the conventional classroom and curriculum. The present chapter proposes a generic framework for implementing (language-)learning/teaching structures, with a special focus on challenging learners' "operational histories" - their habitual patterns of understanding stimuli from their experience of the world. The framework is explicitly learner-centred, individual, personalized and adaptive, and is designed to help learners develop mindsets and strategies to tackle learning issues on their own initiative and in their own way. An example is presented of a successful implementation of the framework for the learning of English pronunciation by Chinese university English Majors. This kind of approach, building specifically on challenging learners' "operational histories", has significant - potential for developing language and culture teaching and learning, and the acquisition of intercultural communication competence, in Asian contexts. C1 [Lian, Andrew] Suranaree Univ Technol, Sch Foreign Languages, Foreign Language Studies, Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand. [Sussex, Roland] Univ Queensland, Sch Languages & Cultures, St Lucia, Qld, Australia. [Sussex, Roland] Univ Queensland, Inst Teaching & Learning Innovat, St Lucia, Qld, Australia. C3 Suranaree University of Technology; University of Queensland; University of Queensland RP Lian, A (corresponding author), Suranaree Univ Technol, Sch Foreign Languages, Foreign Language Studies, Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand. EM Andrew.Lian@andrewlian.com; sussex@uq.edu.au RI Lian, Andrew/HLG-5648-2023 CR [Anonymous], 2015, EF ENGL PROF IND 201 [Anonymous], 2009, UNDERSTANDING LANGUA [Anonymous], 2016, INTERNET USERS COUNT [Anonymous], 2012, PERSPECTIVES INDIVID, DOI [DOI 10.1515/9781614510932, DOI 10.1515/9781614510932.27] [Anonymous], 2016, EF ENGLISH PROFICIEN [Anonymous], COUNSELING LEARNING [Anonymous], 1981, AUTONOMY LANGUAGE LE [Anonymous], 1998, J MATH TEACH EDUC, DOI DOI 10.1023/A:1009973717476 Ash R., 2015, AUDACITY Asp C. W., 2012, TRANSLATIONAL SPEECH, P137 Asp CW., 2012, TRANSLATIONAL SPEECH, P319 Association of Southeast Asian Nations, 2008, THE AS CHART, DOI [10.1017/s0020589308000882, DOI 10.1017/S0020589308000882] Australia in the Asian Century Task Force, 2011, AUSTR AS CENT Bancroft W. J., 1975, INT S SUGG, P1 Benson P., 2007, LANG TEACHING, V40, P21, DOI 10.1017/S0261444806003958 Condon W., 1971, PERCEPTION LANGUAGE, P150 CONDON WS, 1974, CHILD DEV, V45, P456 Cornish H, 2017, PLOS ONE, V12, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0168532 CURRAN C, 1976, COUNSELING LEARNING Gattegno C., 1963, THE SILENT WAY Giedd JN, 2015, SCI AM, V312, P33, DOI 10.1038/scientificamerican0615-32 Guberina P., 1955, P 2 M WORLD ASS DEAF, P186 Guberina P., 1972, RESTRICTED BANDS FRE Guberina P., 1956, REV LARYNGOLOGIE, V1, P20 He B., 2015, 17 INT CALL RES C TA, P276 He B., 2015, RANGSIT J ARTS SCI, V5, P1 Koty A. C., 2016, LABOR MOBILITY ASEAN Levene H., 1960, CONTRIBUTIONS PROBAB, V2, P278, DOI DOI 10.1137/1003016 Lian A. B., 2014, ASIACALL ONLINE J, V9, pA14 Lian A.-P., 2000, SEL PAP 9 INT S ENGL, P4962 Lian A. P, 1980, INTONATION PATTERNS Lian A.-P., 2014, BEYOND WORDS, V2, P1 Lian A.-P., 2011, RANGSIT J ARTS SCI, V1, P3 Lian A.-P., 2017, CHALLENGES GLOBAL LE, P282 Lian A.-P., 1987, REV PHONETIQUE APPLI, V82-84, P167 Lian A-P, 2004, COMPUT ASSIST LANG L, P1 Pineda M. V., 2013, RANGSIT J ARTS SCI, V3, P99 Planck M., YOU CHANGE WAY YOU L Wang G., 2005, ENGLISH PRONUNCIATIO NR 39 TC 1 Z9 1 U1 0 U2 0 PU SPRINGER PI DORDRECHT PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS SN 2213-3208 BN 978-3-319-69995-0; 978-3-319-69994-3 J9 MULTILING EDUC PY 2018 VL 24 BP 37 EP 54 DI 10.1007/978-3-319-69995-0_3 D2 10.1007/978-3-319-69995-0 PG 18 WC Education & Educational Research; Language & Linguistics WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH) SC Education & Educational Research; Linguistics GA BK6OU UT WOS:000440642900003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Cotrau, D Papuc, O AF Cotrau, Diana Papuc, Oana TI CHRONOTOPIC IDENTITIES IN SELF-NARRATIVES AND DEDICATED WEB TEXTS: THE YOUNG ROMANIAN RETURNEE SO BRITISH AND AMERICAN STUDIES LA English DT Article DE chronotopes; dedicated web text; family language policies; language ideology; self-narratives; sociocultural segment; returnee AB Ours is an exploratory study based on a thematic analysis of interviews and web texts of how young former diasporans, now returnees to Romania, construct a collective identity in self-narrative discourse, which is parallelled in dedicated Internet pages. Our primary cultural sociolinguistic focus is on young Romanian adults whose temporary or permanent repatriation has been mainly motivated by their intention to pursue their graduate or post-graduate studies in their country of origin. We aim to diagnose how this particular demographic displays the chronotopic self-awareness of belonging to a novel niche sociocultural segment in Romania, at a time affording them visibility and as particular personas engaged in particular types of social practice in a specific timespace (Blommaert and De Fina 2017). The inception of our investigation was marked by a preliminary observation that young returnees develop self-professed expectations and needs when confronted with the intercultural challenges of reimmersion and integration in the 'home' higher education system. It would appear that they harbor a predisposition for approaching 'specific' co-occurring themes in such semi-directed discourse as incidental to research designed interviews. We have also noted that the themes are partially replicated on webpages catering to the returnee communities of interest, with the associated Facebook pages functioning as veritable echo chambers for the same. We, thus, claim that a focal identity is thematically constructed in discourse by, and in digital texts about, returnees, as underpinned by a particular set of language ideologies, transnational experiences and competences, and worldviews, in turn part of a piecemeal intersubjectivity. C1 [Cotrau, Diana; Papuc, Oana] Babes Bolyai Univ, Cluj Napoca, Romania. C3 Babes Bolyai University from Cluj RP Cotrau, D (corresponding author), Babes Bolyai Univ, Cluj Napoca, Romania. EM diana.cotrau@gmail.com; oanacp112@gmail.com RI Cotrau, Diana/HOI-0109-2023; Papuc, Oana/HZM-4420-2023; Cotrau, Diana Roxana/HTN-3020-2023; Cotrau, Diana G./N-8785-2018 OI Cotrau, Diana G./0000-0003-2495-0097 CR [Anonymous], 2015, PSIHOLOGIA POPORULUI [Anonymous], IDENTITIES TALK Blommaert J, 2017, DIVERSITY SUPER DIVE, P1 Blommaert Jan, 2018, TILBURG PAPERS CULTU, P1 Chiu CY, 2010, PERSPECT PSYCHOL SCI, V5, P482, DOI 10.1177/1745691610375562 Dewaele JM, 2004, STUD BILINGUAL, V28, P81 JASPERS J, 2017, OXFORD HDB LANGUAGE, P704 Jenkins R., 1996, SOCIAL IDENTITY King K., 2006, INT J BILING EDUC BI, V9, P695, DOI [DOI 10.2167/BEB362.0, 10.2167/beb362.0] Oaska-Ponikwia K., 2012, EUROSLA YB, V12, P112, DOI DOI 10.1075/EUROSLA.12.07OZA Panicacci A, 2018, J MULTILING MULTICUL, V39, P240, DOI 10.1080/01434632.2017.1361962 Rooney T., 2016, ELECT J BUS RES METH, V14, P147 Spolsky B., 2004, LANG POLICY-NETH Spolsky B., 2007, WORKING PAPERS ED LI, V22, P1 NR 14 TC 0 Z9 0 U1 0 U2 0 PU EDITURA UNIV VEST PI TIMISOARA PA CALEA BOGDANESTILOR NR 2A, TIMISOARA, 300389, ROMANIA SN 1224-3086 EI 2457-7715 J9 BRIT AM STUD JI Brit. Am. Stud. PY 2020 VL 26 BP 231 EP 240 PG 10 WC Literature WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Literature GA LZ1SP UT WOS:000541009800023 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Park, C Jun, J Lee, T AF Park, Cheol Jun, Jongkun Lee, Thaemin TI Consumer characteristics and the use of social networking sites A comparison between Korea and the US SO INTERNATIONAL MARKETING REVIEW LA English DT Article DE International marketing; Internet marketing; Korea; Innovativeness; Privacy concerns; Social networking sites; Cross-culture; Propensity to share information; The US ID CULTURAL-DIFFERENCES; PRIVACY CONCERN; UNITED-STATES; INDIVIDUALISM-COLLECTIVISM; SHARING BEHAVIOR; CROSS-COUNTRY; SELF-ESTEEM; ONLINE; INNOVATIVENESS; COMMUNITIES AB Purpose - This study examined the antecedents and consequences of intensity of SNS use in a cross-cultural context. The purpose of this paper is to examine the impacts of three IT-related consumer characteristics - privacy concern, consumer innovativeness and propensity to share information - on the use of social networking sites (SNS) and examine if there are cross-national differences in the relationships between consumer characteristics and SNS use. Design/methodology/approach - The authors developed and tested a structural equation model including consumer characteristics related to SNS usage, by using survey data of 977 SNS users in Korea and the US. Findings - Consumer innovativeness, propensity to share information and privacy concern affected intensity of SNS use and the usage of SNS enabled social capital. In addition, the effects of innovativeness and privacy concern on the intensity of SNS use were greater in the US sample than in the Korean sample. People in the culture of high peer pressure and herding behavior tend to expect more reciprocity in social surveillance, especially among in-group members because they are interested in tracking others in the group. This tendency might alleviate the negative impact of privacy concern on the intensity of SNS use. The positive impact of innovativeness on the intensity of SNS use was alleviated in the collectivism culture. This is maybe because the imitation factor predicts the adoption behavior better than the innovation factor in the collectivism culture. Research limitations/implications - Despite several notable contributions, this study has a few limitations, which may be overcome by further research. First, this study did not considered many other personality variables. Second, most measurements were retrospective, depending on the respondents' memory of past shopping behavior. Third, an experimental study will be needed to obtain more accurate effects of the antecedents on the intensity of SNS use in the next stage. Fourth, there are sample limitations in the study. Although this study has some limitations, it also provides very meaningful implications. For example, both the positive impact of innovativeness and the negative impact of privacy concerns on the intensity of SNS use were alleviated in the collectivistic culture. Practical implications - This finding implies that SNS in the collective culture should focus more on group behavior than individual behavior in order to promote SNS use. In addition, it is an effective strategy to emphasize the innovative function of SNS in individualism culture. As privacy concern is not big problem of SNS usage in collectivism culture, it is an effective strategy to stimulate the needs of in-group surveillance. Originality/value - The study contributes to the literature examining cross-cultural influence on SNS use. The study presents how consumer characteristics interact with culture in order to explain the intensity of SNS use. C1 [Park, Cheol] Korea Univ, Div Business Adm, Mkt, Sejong, South Korea. [Jun, Jongkun] Hankuk Univ Foreign Studies, Dept Int Business, Yongin, South Korea. [Lee, Thaemin] Chungbuk Natl Univ, Dept Business Adm, Cheongju, South Korea. C3 Korea University; Hankuk University Foreign Studies; Chungbuk National University RP Jun, J (corresponding author), Hankuk Univ Foreign Studies, Dept Int Business, Yongin, South Korea. EM jkjun@hufs.ac.kr RI Klitzke, Karina/IXD-3488-2023; Jun, Jongkun/C-9306-2012 FU National Research Foundation of Korea - Korean Government [NRF-2014S1A3A2044594]; National Research Foundation of Korea [2014S1A3A2044594] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS) FX This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea Grant funded by the Korean Government (NRF-2014S1A3A2044594). 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Market. Rev. PY 2015 VL 32 IS 3-4 SI SI BP 414 EP 437 DI 10.1108/IMR-09-2013-0213 PG 24 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA CK7VC UT WOS:000356441500009 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Das, M Jebarajakirthy, C AF Das, Manish Jebarajakirthy, Charles TI Impact of acculturation to western culture (AWC) on western fashion luxury consumption among Gen-Y consumers in the Asia-Pacific region SO JOURNAL OF RETAILING AND CONSUMER SERVICES LA English DT Article DE Fashion luxury consumption; Acculturation to Western culture; Consumer ethnocentrism; Materialism ID COMMON METHOD VARIANCE; COUNTRY-OF-ORIGIN; SCALE DEVELOPMENT; SOCIAL MEDIA; VALUES; ETHNOCENTRISM; MATERIALISM; ATTITUDES; GLOBALIZATION; GENERATION AB Gen-Y consumers in the Asia-Pacific region are an attractive market for Western fashion luxury. This study investigates how Gen-Y consumers' acculturation to Western culture (AWC) tendency drives their intention to purchase Western fashion luxury. It further examines the moderating role of consumer ethnocentrism and materialism in the association between AWC dimensions and intention to buy Western fashion luxury items. The data collected from 692 high-income Indian Gen-Y consumers via a survey were analysed using hierarchical moderated regression and fsQCA techniques. This study contributes to fashion luxury literature. Further, the findings will be useful to fashion luxury marketers and retailers. C1 [Das, Manish] Tripura Univ, Dept Business Management, Acad Bldg 10, Bishalgadh 799022, Tripura, India. [Jebarajakirthy, Charles] Griffith Univ, Griffith Business Sch, Dept Mkt, Gold Coast Campus, Southport, Qld 4222, Australia. C3 Tripura University; Griffith University RP Das, M (corresponding author), Tripura Univ, Dept Business Management, Acad Bldg 10, Bishalgadh 799022, Tripura, India. 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PD SEP PY 2020 VL 56 AR 102179 DI 10.1016/j.jretconser.2020.102179 PG 17 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA MM6UG UT WOS:000550289400001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Fekih-Romdhane, F Merhy, G Moubarak, V He, JB Rogoza, R Hallit, R Obeid, S Hallit, S AF Fekih-Romdhane, Feten Merhy, Georges Moubarak, Verginia He, Jinbo Rogoza, Radoslaw Hallit, Rabih Obeid, Sahar Hallit, Souheil TI Validation of the Arabic version of the Muscle Dysmorphic Disorder Inventory (Ar-MDDI) among Lebanese male university students SO JOURNAL OF EATING DISORDERS LA English DT Article DE Muscle dysmorphia; Arabic; Validation; Confirmatory factor analysis ID OF-FIT INDEXES; EATING-DISORDERS; BODY DISSATISFACTION; FEATURES; RECOMMENDATIONS; PERFECTIONISM; SCALE; BEHAVIORS; RISK; MEN AB Background To date, the vast majority of research on disordered eating symptomatology and body image disturbances from the Arab world have been performed exclusively among women; and mainly used thinness-oriented measures that are not sensitive to detect muscularity-oriented symptoms, which are more evident in males. Therefore, the objective of our study was to validate the Arabic version of the Muscle Dysmorphic Disorder Inventory (Ar-MDDI), in order to make it accessible for Arabic-speaking populations. Methods Using a snowball sampling technique, men university students (n = 396) from multiple universities in Lebanon filled the survey in this cross-sectional designed study (January-May 2022). A soft copy of the questionnaire was created using google forms software, and sent to participants through the different social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. We used the Muscle Dysmorphic Disorder Inventory to assess Muscle Dysmorphia, along with the Big Three Perfectionism Scale to assess perfectionism and Eating Attitude Test (EAT) to evaluate the inappropriate eating attitudes. To explore the factor structure of Ar-MDDI, we computed a principal-axis Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA) with the first split-half subsample using the FACTOR software. We used data from the second split-half to conduct a Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) using the SPSS AMOS v.29 software. Pearson correlation test was used to test the convergent and divergent validity of the Ar-MDDI scale with the other scores included in the study. Results The results of the EFA revealed three factors, which explained 57.68% of the common variance: Factor 1 = Appearance intolerance, Factor 2 = Drive for size, and Factor 3 = Functional impairment. The CFA fit indices of the three-factor model of the Ar-MDDI scale showed good results. Moreover, 254 (64.1%) of the participants had inappropriate eating attitudes (EAT scores >= 20). Indices suggested that configural, metric, and scalar invariance was supported according to eating attitudes. No significant difference between participants with appropriate versus inappropriate eating attitudes in terms of functional impairment, drive for size and appearance intolerance. Perfectionism scores correlated positively with the Ar-MDDI, which suggests divergent validity. Conclusion Our findings revealed that the validation of the Arabic scale yielded excellent properties, preliminarily supporting its use for the assessment of muscle dysmorphia among Arabic-speaking university men. This would hopefully allow for its timely detection and management in Arab clinical settings and encourage cross-cultural research on this topic. C1 [Fekih-Romdhane, Feten] Razi Hosp, Tunisian Ctr Early Intervent Psychosis, Dept Psychiat Ibn Omrane, Manouba 2010, Tunisia. [Fekih-Romdhane, Feten] Tunis El Manar Univ, Fac Med Tunis, Tunis, Tunisia. [Merhy, Georges; Moubarak, Verginia; Hallit, Rabih; Hallit, Souheil] Holy Spirit Univ Kaslik, Sch Med & Med Sci, POB 446, Jounieh, Lebanon. [He, Jinbo] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Sch Humanities & Social Sci, Shenzhen 518172, Guangdong, Peoples R China. [Rogoza, Radoslaw] Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski Univ Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland. [Rogoza, Radoslaw] Univ Lleida, Social Innovat Chair, Lleida, Spain. [Obeid, Sahar] Lebanese Amer Univ, Sch Arts & Sci, Social & Educ Sci Dept, Jbeil, Lebanon. [Hallit, Souheil] Effat Univ, Coll Humanities, Psychol Dept, Jeddah 21478, Saudi Arabia. [Hallit, Souheil] Appl Sci Private Univ, Appl Sci Res Ctr, Amman, Jordan. [Hallit, Souheil] Psychiat Hosp Cross, Res Dept, Jal Eddib, Lebanon. C3 Universite de Tunis-El-Manar; Hopital Razi; Universite de Tunis-El-Manar; Faculte de Medecine de Tunis (FMT); Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen; Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw; Universitat de Lleida; Lebanese American University; Effat University RP Hallit, S (corresponding author), Holy Spirit Univ Kaslik, Sch Med & Med Sci, POB 446, Jounieh, Lebanon.; Obeid, S (corresponding author), Lebanese Amer Univ, Sch Arts & Sci, Social & Educ Sci Dept, Jbeil, Lebanon.; Hallit, S (corresponding author), Effat Univ, Coll Humanities, Psychol Dept, Jeddah 21478, Saudi Arabia.; Hallit, S (corresponding author), Appl Sci Private Univ, Appl Sci Res Ctr, Amman, Jordan.; Hallit, S (corresponding author), Psychiat Hosp Cross, Res Dept, Jal Eddib, Lebanon. 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Eat. Disord. PD JAN 26 PY 2023 VL 11 IS 1 AR 11 DI 10.1186/s40337-023-00737-8 PG 10 WC Psychology, Clinical; Nutrition & Dietetics; Psychiatry WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Nutrition & Dietetics; Psychiatry GA 8D8CU UT WOS:000918515600001 PM 36703234 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Wang, JJ Wang, C Gu, XM Sun, Y AF Wang, Juanjuan Wang, Chen Gu, Xiaoming Sun, Yi TI Lockdown in Chinese university dormitories: Significant increase in negative feelings and time perception distortion SO PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS LA English DT Article DE anxiety; depression; dormitory; lockdown; passage of time; stress ID COVID-19 EPIDEMIC; MENTAL-HEALTH; DEPRESSION; PREVALENCE; ANXIETY; ACCELERATION; CONSEQUENCES; CHALLENGES; SYMPTOMS; EMOTIONS AB The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a global crisis resulting in lockdowns worldwide. Studies found that these could amplify negative affects predictive of disturbances in time perception. However, all existing studies on this topic concentrated on the general population during a lockdown at home. There was no research on university students living in dormitories. This study fills a gap in the literature by investigating the affective states and awareness of the passage of time of Chinese university students during an exceptional dormitory lockdown. Using a snowball sampling approach, this web-based study recruited 225 volunteers (136 girls, 17-27 years old) during a dormitory lockdown. The online survey consisted of questions on demographic information, affective states (the Chinese version of the depression anxiety stress scales-21 (DASS-21) on depression, anxiety, and stress), and sense of the passage of time (the translated version of the assessment of passage of time over daily, weekly and yearly periods). The researchers shared the questionnaire link via the social media application WeChat. The study applied descriptive statistics and column charts to represent students' affective states and sense of the passage of time under extreme conditions and Pearson's correlation analysis to examine the impact of affective states on their sense of time. The study's results indicate that the dormitory lockdown caused a significant increase in all depression, anxiety, and stress categories of the DASS-21, as well as a distortion of the sense of time passing. However, the direction of the distortion differed from that in previous studies. Moreover, a Pearson correlation analysis showed that none of the three negative affects could be associated with students' sense of time. The findings of this study indicate an increased vulnerability of students due to the lockdown. Their emotions were strongly affected, requiring particular interventions to preserve their mental well-being. In addition, they showed a different distortion direction of time passage. Finally, they differed in the correlations between negative affect and the sense of passage of time compared to the general population in lockdown at home. This shows a need to investigate the impact of psychological states on students' routines and quality of life in emergencies. This study's scope should be expanded by incorporating additional factors pertaining to the passage of time and by integrating cross-cultural comparisons. C1 [Wang, Juanjuan; Wang, Chen; Gu, Xiaoming] Xian Int Studies Univ, Sch English Teacher Educ, Xian, Peoples R China. [Sun, Yi] Guangdong Univ Foreign Studies, Ctr Linguist & Appl Linguist, Guangzhou, Peoples R China. [Sun, Yi] Guangdong Univ Foreign Studies, Ctr Linguist & Appl Linguist, Baiyun St North 2, Guangzhou, Peoples R China. [Wang, Juanjuan] Xian Int Studies Unicers, Sch English Teacher Educ, South Wenyuan Rd 1, Xian, Peoples R China. C3 Xi'an International Studies University; Guangdong University of Foreign Studies; Guangdong University of Foreign Studies RP Sun, Y (corresponding author), Guangdong Univ Foreign Studies, Ctr Linguist & Appl Linguist, Baiyun St North 2, Guangzhou, Peoples R China.; Wang, JJ (corresponding author), Xian Int Studies Unicers, Sch English Teacher Educ, South Wenyuan Rd 1, Xian, Peoples R China. 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Schools PD JUN PY 2023 VL 60 IS 6 BP 1877 EP 1897 DI 10.1002/pits.22833 EA DEC 2022 PG 21 WC Psychology, Educational WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA E6JG6 UT WOS:000892835700001 PM 36718134 OA Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Harper, H Helmer, J Lea, T Chalkiti, K Emmett, S Wolgemuth, J AF Harper, Helen Helmer, Janet Lea, Tess Chalkiti, Kalotina Emmett, Susan Wolgemuth, Jennifer TI ABRACADABRA for magic under which conditions? Case studies of a web-based literacy intervention in the Northern Territory SO AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND LITERACY LA English DT Article ID AUSTRALIA AB This paper reports on a study examining the use of ABRACADABRA (ABRA), a Canadian web-based tool for supporting early literacy instruction that was trialled in the Northern Territory of Australia over the period 2008-2010. The three year trial established ABRA's effectiveness in urban and remote primary schools with a mix of Indigenous and non-Indigenous students under quasi-experimental and experimental conditions. Both this Australian trial and preceding studies in Canada demonstrated ABRA's capacity to generate significant student outcomes against a range of literacy measures. These studies further found student effects are greatly enhanced when teachers confidently integrate ABRA content into their broader literacy program; and conversely, that ABRA has reduced impact when teachers are less confident with integrating the technology into their teaching. Given ABRA is freely available on the internet, we additionally felt it was important to consider ABRA's likely implementation fate in non-research circumstances. The study reported here examines four north Australian primary schools which implemented ABRA outside of trial conditions, and was conceived as something of a pre-emptive strike against premature uptake of this otherwise promising program. We develop our analysis from classroom observations and interviews with practitioners, and explore how ABRA might fare if it were implemented with minimal support; or rather, with a level of support equivalent to that typically offered in Northern Territory schools for other literacy programs. Our findings confirm a universal education truism about the importance of carefully targeted training and support to ensure optimal outcomes for program effect; a truism which arguably has greater import in the turbulent school environments facing socially disadvantaged students in north Australian schools. This study has implications for how educational interventions, particularly in remote and cross-cultural settings, might be implemented and sustained at scale. C1 [Harper, Helen; Helmer, Janet] Menzies Sch Hlth Res, Ctr Child Dev & Educ, Darwin, NT, Australia. [Lea, Tess] Univ Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia. [Emmett, Susan] Univ Ballarat, Educ, Ballarat, Vic, Australia. [Wolgemuth, Jennifer] Colorado State Univ, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA. C3 Charles Darwin University; Menzies School of Health Research; University of Sydney; Federation University Australia; Colorado State University RP Harper, H (corresponding author), Menzies Sch Hlth Res, Ctr Child Dev & Educ, Darwin, NT, Australia. RI Lea, Tess/F-9272-2011; Harper, Helen/X-2340-2019 OI Lea, Tess/0000-0002-0444-1466; Harper, Helen/0000-0003-1882-1977; Helmer, Janet/0000-0002-2329-7885; Emmett, Susan/0000-0002-0490-9989 CR Abrami P. 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PD FEB PY 2012 VL 35 IS 1 BP 33 EP 50 PG 18 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA VG7BT UT WOS:000448141300003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Celik, H AF Celik, Hakan TI Influence of social norms, perceived playfulness and online shopping anxiety on customers' adoption of online retail shopping An empirical study in the Turkish context SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RETAIL & DISTRIBUTION MANAGEMENT LA English DT Article DE Turkey; Consumer behaviour; Electronic commerce; Internet shopping ID TECHNOLOGY ACCEPTANCE MODEL; USER ACCEPTANCE; INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; PURCHASE INTENTIONS; E-COMMERCE; EASE; CONSUMERS; BEHAVIOR; INNOVATIVENESS; DETERMINANTS AB Purpose - The previous studies examining the role of subjective norm (SN), online shopping anxiety (ANX)and perceived playfulness (PPL) in predicting the consumer's adoption of online shopping yielded fragmented and inconsistent findings. Also, a high proportion of these findings assessing the regarded behaviour of consumers in the West cannot be directly applied to a cross-cultural context. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationships between these variables and the variables of technology acceptance model (TAM) associated with customer's online shopping intentions in an international environment. Design/methodology/approach - The research model reflecting the effects of SN, ANX and PPL on TAM constructs has been proposed. In total, 278 cases were gathered from online shoppers through aweb-based survey. Structural equation modelling was used to evaluate the proposed research model in terms of path significance, overall model fit and explanatory power. Findings - It was found that PPL had positive direct effects on both perceived ease of use of online shopping (PEOU) and behavioural intentions to shop online (BI). Nevertheless, SN and ANX appeared to exert significant positive and negative influences respectfully on only PEOU. Research limitations/implications - The study findings were obtained from the single snapshot research, and the small dataset covering only actual online shoppers. Therefore, the future research should carry a longitudinal nature to show the temporal change effects and remedy the possibility of self-selection bias with a broader research sample. Originality/value - The paper provides additional insights for retailers and researchers into the effects of SN, ANX and PPL on online shopping intentions of Turkish consumers, which could be used in formulating online marketing strategies and considering future research directions. C1 [Celik, Hakan] Bilecik Univ, Dept Business Adm, Mkt, Bilecik, Turkey. C3 Bilecik Seyh Edebali University RP Celik, H (corresponding author), Bilecik Univ, Dept Business Adm, Mkt, Bilecik, Turkey. 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J. Retail Distrib. Manag. PY 2011 VL 39 IS 6 BP 390 EP + DI 10.1108/09590551111137967 PG 27 WC Business; Management WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Business & Economics GA V77YA UT WOS:000212013900002 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Pollet, TV Saxton, TK AF Pollet, Thomas V. Saxton, Tamsin K. TI How Diverse Are the Samples Used in the Journals 'Evolution & Human Behavior' and 'Evolutionary Psychology'? SO EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE LA English DT Article DE Cross-cultural samples; WEIRD; Sampling; Participants ID LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS; SEX-DIFFERENCES; COLLEGE SOPHOMORES; MECHANICAL TURK; AGE PREFERENCES; SELECTION BIAS; INTERNET; VALIDITY; SCIENCE; WEIRD AB Psychologists regularly draw inferences about populations based on data from small samples of people, and so have long been interested in how well those samples generalise to wider populations. There is a consensus that psychology probably relies too much on samples from Western, Educated, Industrialised, Rich and Democratic (WEIRD) societies and among those from university students. Online surveys might be used to increase sample diversity, although online sampling still reaches only a restricted range of participants. Studies from evolutionary psychology often seek to uncover aspects of evolved universal characteristics, and so might demonstrate a particular interest in the use of diverse samples. Here, we empirically examine the samples used in the 2015-2016 volumes of 'Evolution & Human Behavior' (104 articles) and 'Evolutionary Psychology' (76 articles). Our database consists of 311 samples of humans (median sample size=186). The majority of samples were either online or student samples (70% of samples), followed by other adult Western samples (19%). Two hundred fifty-three (81%) of the samples were classified as 'Western' (Europe/North America/Australia). The remaining samples were predominantly from Asia (N=37; 12%, mostly Japan). Only a small fraction of the samples were taken from Latin American and Caribbean (N=8) or African (N=6) countries. The median sample size did not differ significantly between continents, but online samples (both paid and unpaid) were typically larger than samples sourced offline. It seems that the samples used are more diverse than those that have been reported in reviews of the literature from social and developmental psychology, perhaps because evolutionary psychology has a greater inherent need to test hypotheses about an evolved and universal human nature. However, it is also apparent that the majority of samples within contemporary evolutionary psychology research remain WEIRD. C1 [Pollet, Thomas V.; Saxton, Tamsin K.] Northumbria Univ, Dept Psychol, NB 165,Northumberland Bldg,2 Ellison Pl, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 8ST, Tyne & Wear, England. 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Psychol. Sci. PD SEP PY 2019 VL 5 IS 3 BP 357 EP 368 DI 10.1007/s40806-019-00192-2 PG 12 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Psychology GA VJ6LS UT WOS:000614895300010 OA Green Accepted, Green Submitted, hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Yilmaz, E Yel, S Griffiths, MD AF Yilmaz, Eyup Yel, Selma Griffiths, Mark D. TI Comparison of Value Perception of Children in Playing Videogames and Traditional Games: Turkish and British Samples SO EGITIM VE BILIM-EDUCATION AND SCIENCE LA English DT Article DE Videogames; Traditional games; Type of game; Value perception; Primary schoolchildren; Cross-cultural comparison ID MORAL DEVELOPMENT; AGGRESSIVE-BEHAVIOR; PERSONALITY-TRAITS; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; COMPUTER GAMES; VIOLENT; ADDICTION; EDUCATION; INTERNET; ADOLESCENTS AB The present study examined the value perceptions of Turkish and British children according to various variables and determined to what extent traditional and videogame genres preferred by children predict their value perceptions, dominant case design, one of the mixed research designs, was used. While the quantitative approach was mainly used in the research, the qualitative approach was used as a supporter. The data collection process of the study lasted for two academic years. In the first year, the study was conducted with 243 primary school students studying in Nottingham (England). In the following year it was conducted with 267 primary school students studying in Ankara (Turkey). A total of 510 primary school students with ages ranging from 9-11 years were recruited for the study. Data were collected using the "Personal Information Form" and "Moral Dilemma Stories Inventory for Children". Both were developed in English and then adapted into Turkish. It was found that, in both sample, girls' value perception scores were significantly higher than boys' scores. Videogames primarily produced for entertainment were the most preferred games by Turkish and British children while educational and serious videogames were the least preferred. Traditional games in sports (soccer, cricket, etc.) were preferred more by British children, while traditional action games (dodgeball, playing tag etc.) were preferred more by Turkish children. It was found that action-adventure and role-playing videogames predicted children's value perception negatively, and simulation and puzzle videogame genres predicted children's value perceptions positively. Furthermore, movement-based traditional games (sports, action) predicted children's value perceptions positively, while traditional competitive (racing) games predicted children's value perceptions negatively. C1 [Yilmaz, Eyup] Adnan Menderes Univ, Dept Elementary Educ, Fac Educ, Aydin, Turkey. [Yel, Selma] Gazi Univ, Dept Elementary Educ, Fac Educ, Ankara, Turkey. [Griffiths, Mark D.] Nottingham Trent Univ, Dept Psychol, Int Gaming Res Unit, Nottingham, England. C3 Adnan Menderes University; Gazi University; Nottingham Trent University RP Yilmaz, E (corresponding author), Adnan Menderes Univ, Dept Elementary Educ, Fac Educ, Aydin, Turkey. EM eyup.yilmaz@adu.edu.tr; selmayel@gazi.edu.tr; mark.griffiths@ntu.ac.uk FU Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) FX We would like to thank the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) for financially supporting the UK process of the present study for 12 months. 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Bilim PY 2022 VL 47 IS 210 BP 15 EP 40 DI 10.15390/EB.2022.10574 PG 26 WC Education & Educational Research WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA 1D4CR UT WOS:000793750500002 OA gold, Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ahmad, S Lensink, R Mueller, A AF Ahmad, Syedah Lensink, Robert Mueller, Annika TI Boosting Survey Response Rates by Announcing Undefined Lottery Prizes in Invitation Email Subject Lines: Evidence from a Global Randomized Controlled Trial SO SURVEY RESEARCH METHODS LA English DT Article DE Cross-cultural survey research; Incentivized email recruitment; International survey research; Islamic survey methodology; Randomized controlled trial; Response rate; Contact rate ID WEB SURVEY; SURVEY NONRESPONSE; MAIL SURVEYS; SURVEY PARTICIPATION; INCENTIVES; IMPACT; INTERNET; PERFORMANCE; CASH; METAANALYSIS AB To test whether announcing undefined lottery prizes (AULP) in the subject line of survey invitation emails influences contact and response rates, we conduct a unique, randomized, controlled trial using a multicultural, multinational sample of 5,128 key staff members of microfinance institutions from 124 countries, half of whom randomly receive the AULP treatment. By applying the leverage-salience theory of survey participation, proposed by Groves, Singer, and Corning (2000), we formulate three main hypotheses and establish three main findings. (1) In line with AULP increasing the salience of the underlying lottery incentive, we find that on average, contact and response rates are significantly higher in the AULP treatment group. (2) In line with respondents in Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) countries assigning a more negative leverage to the underlying lottery, reflecting more negative socio-cultural atti-tudes toward gambling stemming from Islamic religious norms, we find the treatment effect of the salience-inducing AULP treatment to be lower among respondents in OIC countries than in non-OIC countries. (3) Consistent with translation provision into a local language enhanc-ing the salience of the underlying lottery further, we find that the positive effect of AULP is accentuated for the subgroup of non-OIC countries that received translations, and the effect of AULP is even lower for the subgroup of OIC countries that received translations, than for those which did not. The results offer no indication that AULP leads to non-response bias or other adverse effects on data quality. Overall, our results suggest that AULP can be an effective tool for increasing contact and response rates, especially for translated surveys, but possible negative socio-cultural attitudes towards lotteries need to be considered. C1 [Ahmad, Syedah; Lensink, Robert; Mueller, Annika] Univ Groningen, Fac Econ & Business, Groningen, Netherlands. C3 University of Groningen RP Lensink, R (corresponding author), Univ Groningen, Fac Econ & Business, Groningen, Netherlands. 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Res. Methods PY 2022 VL 16 IS 2 BP 165 EP 206 DI 10.18148/srm/2022.v16i2.7651 PG 42 WC Social Sciences, Mathematical Methods WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Mathematical Methods In Social Sciences GA 4Y2RS UT WOS:000861378000003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Nakanishi, M Miyamoto, Y Nakashima, T Shindo, Y Nishida, A AF Nakanishi, Miharu Miyamoto, Yuki Nakashima, Taeko Shindo, Yumi Nishida, Atsushi TI Care preferences of healthy, middle-aged adults in Japan and the USA if they acquired dementia: A cross-sectional observational study SO GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL LA English DT Article DE community care; cross-cultural comparison; dementia; healthcare policy; long-term care ID LONG-TERM-CARE; OLDER-PEOPLE AB Aim Japan introduced dementia-friendly initiatives into its national policies to help people with dementia remain involved in society for as long as possible. However, some people might choose to live in a nursing home to avoid care burden on family members. Understanding middle-aged adults' preferences for place of care and identifying factors that influence their preferences would help policy decision-makers promote dementia-friendly initiatives. The present study aimed to investigate the care preferences of middle-aged adults if they acquired dementia in Japan and the USA. Methods We carried out a cross-sectional observational study using an internet-based questionnaire survey of Japanese residents with Japanese ethnicity, Japanese Americans, and non-Asian Americans aged 40-70 years. A total of 301 participants, including 104 Japanese residents, 93 Japanese Americans and 104 non-Asian Americans, completed the survey. Participants were asked to answer the items based on a hypothetical situation in which they had acquired dementia requiring regular care and supervision. Results Participants preferred nursing home care (29.9%), followed by professional home care (19.6%), family home care (17.6%) and hospital care (11.3%). Japanese residents had a significantly lower preference for professional home care than did Japanese or non-Asian Americans (adjusted odds ratio 0.28, 95% confidence interval 0.10-0.75). Between-ethnicity difference in care preferences was not observed. Conclusions A low preference for professional home care among the middle-aged adults might be influenced by country-specific long-term and dementia care systems. Policy decision-makers should develop professional home care services that are more available for families of people living with dementia. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2019; 19: 829-833. C1 [Nakanishi, Miharu] Tokyo Metropolitan Inst Med Sci, Mental Hlth Promot Project, Mental Hlth & Nursing Res Team, Tokyo, Japan. [Miyamoto, Yuki] Univ Tokyo, Grad Sch Med, Dept Psychiat Nursing, Tokyo, Japan. [Nakashima, Taeko] Nihon Fukushi Univ, Grad Sch Hlth & Social Serv Management, Mihama, Japan. [Shindo, Yumi] Natl Ctr Geriatr & Gerontol, Bur Strateg Planning, Morioka, Iwate, Japan. [Nishida, Atsushi] Tokyo Metropolitan Inst Med Sci, Mental Hlth Promot Project, Tokyo, Japan. C3 Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science; University of Tokyo; National Center for Geriatrics & Gerontology; Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science RP Nakanishi, M (corresponding author), Tokyo Metropolitan Inst Med Sci, Mental Hlth Promot Project, Mental Hlth & Nursing Res Team, Setagaya Ku, 2-1-6 Kamikitazawa, Tokyo 1568506, Japan. EM mnakanishi-tky@umin.ac.jp RI Nakanishi, Miharu/AAC-7637-2020; Andoh, Akira/AAB-9303-2022 OI Nakanishi, Miharu/0000-0001-6200-9279; CR [Anonymous], JAP STAT YB 2018 [Anonymous], NEUROIMAGING DIAGNOS [Anonymous], GENW COST CAR SURV 2 [Anonymous], SUMM REP COMPR SURV [Anonymous], 2017, INT J CARE CARING, DOI DOI 10.1332/239788217X14951898377524 Casado BL, 2018, GERONTOLOGIST, V58, pE25, DOI 10.1093/geront/gnw253 Etkind SN, 2018, J AM GERIATR SOC, V66, P1031, DOI 10.1111/jgs.15272 Faul F, 2007, BEHAV RES METHODS, V39, P175, DOI 10.3758/BF03193146 Faul F, 2009, BEHAV RES METHODS, V41, P1149, DOI 10.3758/BRM.41.4.1149 Heward M, 2017, HEALTH SOC CARE COMM, V25, P858, DOI 10.1111/hsc.12371 Hurd MD, 2013, NEW ENGL J MED, V368, P1326, DOI [10.1056/NEJMsa1204629, 10.1056/NEJMc1305541] International Labour Organization (ILO), 2012, INT STANDARD CLASSIF Jennings AA, 2018, INT J GERIATR PSYCH, V33, P1163, DOI 10.1002/gps.4918 Kato Gohei, 2009, BMC Geriatr, V9, P58, DOI 10.1186/1471-2318-9-58 Kwak J, 2005, GERONTOLOGIST, V45, P634, DOI 10.1093/geront/45.5.634 Mair CA, 2016, GERONTOLOGIST, V56, P687, DOI 10.1093/geront/gnu119 McCormick WC, 2002, J AM GERIATR SOC, V50, P1149, DOI 10.1046/j.1532-5415.2002.50275.x Miranda R, 2019, PALLIATIVE MED, V33, P726, DOI 10.1177/0269216319847092 Nakabe T, 2018, INT J GERIATR PSYCH, V33, P1243, DOI 10.1002/gps.4916 Nakanishi M, 2018, BMJ OPEN, V8, DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023172 Nakanishi M, 2014, ALZHEIMERS DEMENT, V10, P468, DOI 10.1016/j.jalz.2013.06.005 Patterson KM, 2018, INT PSYCHOGERIATR, V30, P791, DOI 10.1017/S1041610216002374 Prince M, 2013, ALZHEIMERS DEMENT, V9, P63, DOI 10.1016/j.jalz.2012.11.007 Reyniers T, 2015, J AM MED DIR ASSOC, V16, P165, DOI 10.1016/j.jamda.2014.11.003 Sachs GA, 2004, J GEN INTERN MED, V19, P1057, DOI 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2004.30329.x Tamiya N, 2011, LANCET, V378, P1183, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61176-8 Wu Z, 2016, J GERONTOL B-PSYCHOL, V71, P1108, DOI 10.1093/geronb/gbu187 Yamaguchi Y, 2016, GERIATR GERONTOL INT, V16, P1204, DOI 10.1111/ggi.12615 Yeo LHJ, 2007, DEMENT GERIATR COGN, V23, P368, DOI 10.1159/000101338 NR 29 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 3 U2 9 PU WILEY PI HOBOKEN PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA SN 1444-1586 EI 1447-0594 J9 GERIATR GERONTOL INT JI Geriatr. Gerontol. Int. PD AUG PY 2019 VL 19 IS 8 BP 829 EP 833 DI 10.1111/ggi.13729 PG 5 WC Geriatrics & Gerontology; Gerontology WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Geriatrics & Gerontology GA IP8IG UT WOS:000480289500022 PM 31282019 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Mindell, JA Lee, C Sadeh, A AF Mindell, Jodi A. Lee, Christina Sadeh, Avi TI Young child and maternal sleep in the Middle East SO SLEEP MEDICINE LA English DT Article DE Sleep; Preschool; Cross-cultural; Child ID NIGHT-WAKINGS; MOOD; INFANTS; ADULTS AB Background: This study aimed to characterize sleep patterns and sleep problems in a large sample of infants and toddlers (from birth to three years) and their mothers in Arabic-speaking families in the Middle East and compare the results to those living in predominantly Asian and predominantly Caucasian countries/regions. Methods: Mothers of 669 young children (from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Algeria, United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Morocco, Iraq, Kuwai, Oman, Palestinian territories, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Bahrain, Israel, and other Arab countries) completed an Internet-based expanded version of the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire, Daily Infant Mood Scale, and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Results: Overall, children and their mothers in the Middle East slept on a shifted schedule, with late bedtimes and waketimes compared to those from predominantly Asian and predominantly Caucasian countries/regions. Almost all families room-shared with their children, although less than half bed shared. A significant percentage of parents perceived that their child had a sleep problem (37%), with a high prevalence of poor sleep in mothers (72%). Parent-reported child mood was modestly associated with sleep patterns but more so with parent-perceived sleep problems. Parent-perceived sleep problems in their young child were predicted by bedtimes, prevalence of a bedtime routine, and night wakings. Conclusions: Overall, both young children and their mothers in the Middle East have a delayed sleep schedule, going to bed late in the evening and waking up late in the morning. Sleep was associated with mood outcomes, with bedtimes, bedtime routines, and falling asleep independently predicting sleep outcomes. The high prevalence of sleep problems in both the infants and toddlers and their mothers supports the need for sleep to be addressed by pediatric and adult healthcare practitioners. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. C1 [Mindell, Jodi A.] St Josephs Univ, Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA 19131 USA. [Lee, Christina] Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc, Ft Washington, PA USA. [Sadeh, Avi] Tel Aviv Univ, Sch Psychol Sci, Tel Aviv, Israel. C3 Saint Joseph's University; University of Pennsylvania; Pennsylvania Medicine; Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia; Johnson & Johnson; Tel Aviv University RP Mindell, JA (corresponding author), St Josephs Univ, Dept Psychol, Philadelphia, PA 19131 USA. EM jmindell@sju.edu RI Sadeh, Avi/K-5392-2012 OI Mindell, Jodi/0000-0001-7628-815X FU Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. FX This study was supported by Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. 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PD APR PY 2017 VL 32 BP 75 EP 82 DI 10.1016/j.sleep.2016.11.011 PG 8 WC Clinical Neurology WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Neurosciences & Neurology GA ET3WX UT WOS:000400211300012 PM 28366345 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Schnyder, U Schafer, I Aakvaag, HF Ajdukovic, D Bakker, A Bisson, JI Brewer, D Cloitre, M Dyb, GA Frewen, P Lanza, J Le Brocque, R Lueger-Schuster, B Mwiti, GK Oe, M Rosner, R Schellong, J Shigemura, J Wu, K Olff, M AF Schnyder, Ulrich Schaefer, Ingo Aakvaag, Helene F. Ajdukovic, Dean Bakker, Anne Bisson, Jonathan I. Brewer, Douglas Cloitre, Marylene Dyb, Grete A. Frewen, Paul Lanza, Juliana Le Brocque, Robyne Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte Mwiti, Gladys K. Oe, Misari Rosner, Rita Schellong, Julia Shigemura, Jun Wu, Kitty Olff, Miranda TI The global collaboration on traumatic stress SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTRAUMATOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Trauma; global collaboration; childhood abuse and neglect; CARTS; refugee mental health ID MENTAL-HEALTH AB Trauma is a global issue. The great majority of the global burden of disease arising from mental health conditions occurs in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs), among populations in political, economic, and/ or cultural transition and those struck by forced migration. These mental health problems frequently arise as a result of traumatic events that adversely affect adults, children, and families, including war, mass violence, natural disasters, and accidents. In response to this, the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS) launched the Global Initiative to have a stronger global impact on trauma-related issues. As part of this initiative, the Global Collaboration was established by representatives of eight professional organizations active in the field of traumatic stress. The group decided to focus on childhood abuse and neglect as its first collaboration. They collected guidelines worldwide, providing the basis for a synthesized core guide for prevention and treatment that can be customized for specific cultural contexts. The resulting ` Internet information on Childhood Abuse and Neglect' (iCAN) is a comprehensive guide for adults who have been affected by childhood abuse and neglect, as well as for the survivors' significant others. It is currently provided in eight languages, and is freely available at the homepage of ISTSS and other websites. A second achievement of the Global Collaboration is the validation of the Computerized Childhood Attachment and Relational Trauma Screen (CARTS), a self-report measure designed to measure occurrences of childhood maltreatment, and its translation into multiple languages, including Croatian, Dutch, French, Georgian, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Russian, and Spanish. A study is currently planned to collect normative responses to the questionnaire, and to conduct cross-cultural comparisons. The Global Collaboration's success may be seen as an encouraging step towards a truly global structure in the field of traumatic stress. C1 [Schnyder, Ulrich] Univ Zurich, Univ Hosp Zurich, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, Zurich, Switzerland. [Schaefer, Ingo] Univ Med Ctr Hamburg Eppendorf, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, Hamburg, Germany. [Aakvaag, Helene F.; Dyb, Grete A.] Norwegian Ctr Violence & Traumat Stress Studies, Oslo, Norway. [Ajdukovic, Dean] Univ Zagreb, Fac Humanities & Social Sci, Dept Psychol, Zagreb, Croatia. [Bakker, Anne; Olff, Miranda] Univ Amsterdam, Acad Med Ctr, Dept Psychiat, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Bisson, Jonathan I.] Cardiff Univ, Sch Med, Div Psychol Med & Clin Neurosci, Cardiff, S Glam, Wales. [Brewer, Douglas] Hollywood Clin, Ramsay Hlth Care, Perth, WA, Australia. [Cloitre, Marylene] Stanford Univ, Natl Ctr PTSD Disseminat, Menlo Pk, CA USA. [Cloitre, Marylene] Stanford Univ, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, VA Palo Alto Hlth Care Syst, Training Div, Menlo Pk, CA USA. [Dyb, Grete A.] Univ Oslo, Inst Clin Med, Fac Med, Oslo, Norway. [Frewen, Paul] Western Univ, Dept Psychiat, London, ON, Canada. [Lanza, Juliana] Argentine Soc Psychotrauma, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina. [Le Brocque, Robyne] Univ Queensland, Sch Nursing Midwifery & Social Work, Brisbane, Qld, Australia. [Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte] Univ Vienna, Fac Psychol, Clin Psychol, Vienna, Austria. [Mwiti, Gladys K.] Oasis Africa Ctr Transformat Psychol & Trauma, Nairobi, Kenya. [Oe, Misari] Kurume Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neuropsychiat, Kurume, Fukuoka, Japan. [Rosner, Rita] Catholic Univ Eichstatt Ingolstadt, Dept Psychol, Eichstatt, Germany. [Schellong, Julia] Tech Univ Dresden, Univ Hosp Carl Gustav Carus, Dept Psychotherapy & Psychosomat Med, Dresden, Germany. [Shigemura, Jun] Natl Def Med Coll, Dept Psychiat, Tokorozawa, Saitama, Japan. [Wu, Kitty] Asian Soc Traumat Stress Studies, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Wu, Kitty] Kwai Chung Hosp, Hosp Author, Clin Psychol Serv, Kwai Chung, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Olff, Miranda] Arq Psychotrauma Expert Grp, Diemen, Netherlands. C3 University of Zurich; University Zurich Hospital; University of Hamburg; University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf; University of Zagreb; University of Amsterdam; Academic Medical Center Amsterdam; Cardiff University; Stanford University; Stanford University; US Department of Veterans Affairs; Veterans Health Administration (VHA); VA Palo Alto Health Care System; University of Oslo; Western University (University of Western Ontario); University of Queensland; University of Vienna; Kurume University; Technische Universitat Dresden; Carl Gustav Carus University Hospital; National Defense Medical College - Japan; Arq Psychotrauma Expert Group RP Schnyder, U (corresponding author), Univ Hosp, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, Culmannstr 8, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland. EM ulrich.schnyder@access.uzh.ch RI Rosner, Rita/H-6465-2015; Oe, Misari/AFM-8559-2022; Le Brocque, Robyne/F-4848-2010; Olff, Miranda/S-6235-2019; Ajdukovic, Dean/X-2308-2019; Schäfer, Ingo/B-7514-2017 OI Oe, Misari/0000-0003-4550-036X; Le Brocque, Robyne/0000-0002-4574-1254; Schäfer, Ingo/0000-0002-9711-3559; Schnyder, Ulrich/0000-0003-3556-7990; Lanza, Juliana/0000-0003-1445-1585; Bakker, Anne/0000-0002-3248-2441; Olff, Miranda/0000-0003-1016-9515; Lueger-Schuster, Brigitte/0000-0003-0784-8437 CR [Anonymous], 2022, FIG GLANC Ferrari AJ, 2013, PLOS ONE, V8, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0069637 Fodor KE, 2014, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V5, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v5.23269 Frewen P, 2015, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V6, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v6.27792 Frewen PA, 2013, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V4, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v4i0.20232 Hall BJ, 2016, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V7, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v7.31140 Kantor V, 2017, CLIN PSYCHOL REV, V52, P52, DOI 10.1016/j.cpr.2016.12.001 Magruder KM, 2016, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V7, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v7.29715 Olff M, 2015, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V6, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v6.27882 Olff M, 2013, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V4, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v4i0.20873 Purgato M, 2015, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V6, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v6.30120 Schnyder U, 2016, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V7, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v7.31179 Schnyder U, 2013, EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO, V4, DOI 10.3402/ejpt.v4i0.20419 Simonelli A., 2017, ITALIAN TRANSL UNPUB NR 14 TC 17 Z9 17 U1 1 U2 9 PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD PI ABINGDON PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND SN 2000-8066 J9 EUR J PSYCHOTRAUMATO JI Eur. J. Psychotraumatol. PY 2017 VL 8 SU 7 SI SI AR 1403257 DI 10.1080/20008198.2017.1403257 PG 5 WC Psychology, Clinical; Psychiatry WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Psychiatry GA HB0GY UT WOS:000450692600003 PM 29435201 OA Green Published, Green Accepted, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lippa, RA AF Lippa, Richard A. TI The preferred traits of mates in a cross-national study of heterosexual and homosexual men and women: An examination of biological and cultural influences SO ARCHIVES OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE cross-cultural research; mating psychology; physical attractiveness; sex differences; sexual orientation; evolutionary theory; social structural theory ID SEXUAL ORIENTATION; GENDER DIFFERENCES; SELECTION PREFERENCES; AGE PREFERENCES; CAMPUS VALUES; EVOLUTION; CHOICE; MODEL AB BBC Internet survey participants (119,733 men and 98,462 women) chose from a list of 23 traits those they considered first, second, and third most important in a relationship partner. Across all participants, the traits ranked most important were: intelligence, humor, honesty, kindness, overall good looks, face attractiveness, values, communication skills, and dependability. On average, men ranked good looks and facial attractiveness more important than women did (d = 0.55 and 0.36, respectively), whereas women ranked honesty, humor, kindness, and dependability more important than men did (ds = 0.23, 0.22, 0.18, and 0.15). Sexual orientation differences were smaller than sex differences in trait rankings, but some were meaningful; for example, heterosexual more than homosexual participants assigned importance to religion, fondness for children, and parenting abilities. Multidimensional scaling analyses showed that trait preference profiles clustered by participant sex, not by sexual orientation, and by sex more than by nationality. Sex-by-nation ANOVAs of individuals' trait rankings showed that sex differences in rankings of attractiveness, but not of character traits, were extremely consistent across 53 nations and that nation main effects and sex-by-nation interactions were stronger for character traits than for physical attractiveness. United Nations indices of gender equality correlated, across nations, with men's and women's rankings of character traits but not with their rankings of physical attractiveness. These results suggest that cultural factors had a relatively greater impact on men's and women's rankings of character traits, whereas biological factors had a relatively greater impact on men's and women's rankings of physical attractiveness. C1 Calif State Univ Fullerton, Dept Psychol, Fullerton, CA 92834 USA. C3 California State University System; California State University Fullerton RP Lippa, RA (corresponding author), Calif State Univ Fullerton, Dept Psychol, Fullerton, CA 92834 USA. EM rlippa@fullerton.edu CR [Anonymous], 2005, BORN GAY PSYCHOBIOLO BAILEY JM, 1994, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V66, P1081, DOI 10.1037/0022-3514.66.6.1081 Buss D. 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PD APR PY 2007 VL 36 IS 2 BP 193 EP 208 DI 10.1007/s10508-006-9151-2 PG 16 WC Psychology, Clinical; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Social Sciences - Other Topics GA 162QI UT WOS:000246102800010 PM 17380374 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Weijters, B Baumgartner, H Geuens, M AF Weijters, Bert Baumgartner, Hans Geuens, Maggie TI The calibrated sigma method: An efficient remedy for between-group differences in response category use on Likert scales SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN MARKETING LA English DT Article; Proceedings Paper CT Theory + Practice in Marketing Conference CY 2014 CL NW Univ, Kellogg Sch Management, Boston, MA HO NW Univ, Kellogg Sch Management DE Response bias; Language differences; Survey methods; Likert items ID MARKETING-RESEARCH; TELEPHONE SURVEYS; STYLES; BIAS; RECOMMENDATIONS; INFORMATION; PERSUASION; RESISTANCE; INTERNET; ISSUES AB The authors propose a procedure, labeled the calibrated sigma method, which is designed to correct for between-group differences in endorsement likelihood of response categories that are unrelated to the content of the items. The method is especially useful in cross-cultural research where group differences may reflect variation in scale usage rather than substantive differences. However, the procedure is also relevant in other situations, for example, when different data collection modes or different experimental manipulations affect respondents' perception of the meaning of the scale labels. The calibrated sigma method uses information derived from heterogeneous control items (calibration items) to reweight the responses to substantive items in a group-specific way. The advantages of the calibrated sigma method are that it avoids the arbitrariness in the assignment of particular numerical values to response categories; that it is compatible with the linear model, which is used by most marketing researchers; and that it does not require the use of complex nonlinear models involving the estimation of many additional measurement model parameters. The authors validate the calibrated sigma method on a simulated cross-linguistic data set pertaining to 12 different languages; an empirical data set collected from respondents of the same nationality but from two different language groups; and an experimental data set consisting of responses to two different response scale formats. The findings demonstrate that the proposed procedure controls for artefactual scale use differences across groups but does not eliminate substantive differences. It is particularly efficient for marketing research agencies, panel providers and other marketing researchers who analyze surveys involving multiple language groups, different scale formats, multiple modes of data collection, or different manipulations affecting the meaning of the response category labels. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. C1 [Weijters, Bert] Univ Ghent, Dept Personnel Management Work & Org Psychol, Dunantlaan 2, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. [Baumgartner, Hans] Penn State Univ, Dept Mkt, 482 Business Bldg, University Pk, PA 16802 USA. [Geuens, Maggie] Univ Ghent, Tweekerkenstr 2, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. [Geuens, Maggie] Vlerick Business Sch, Reep 1, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. C3 Ghent University; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania State University - University Park; Ghent University; Vlerick Business School RP Weijters, B (corresponding author), Univ Ghent, Dept Personnel Management Work & Org Psychol, Dunantlaan 2, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. EM bert.weijters@ugent.be; hansbaumgartner@psu.edu; Maggie.geuens@UGent.be RI Weijters, Bert/H-8054-2019; Baumgartner, Hans/A-4198-2008 OI Weijters, Bert/0000-0002-8590-0088; CR [Anonymous], 2009, LINEAR CAUSAL MODELI [Anonymous], EUROPEAN PSYCHOL [Anonymous], 2010, GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURS [Anonymous], 1991, ORG CULTURES SOFTWAR Arce-Ferrer AJ, 2006, EDUC PSYCHOL MEAS, V66, P374, DOI 10.1177/0013164405278575 Baumgartner H, 2001, J MARKETING RES, V38, P143, DOI 10.1509/jmkr.38.2.143.18840 Baumgartner H., 2015, HDB CULTURE CONSUMER, P370 BEARDEN WO, 1989, J CONSUM RES, V15, P473, DOI 10.1086/209186 Cabooter E, 2016, J CONSUM PSYCHOL, V26, P510, DOI 10.1016/j.jcps.2016.03.002 Cabooter E, 2016, J BUS RES, V69, P2574, DOI 10.1016/j.jbusres.2015.10.138 Chang L, 2009, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V73, P641, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfp075 Clarke I, 2001, INT MARKET REV, V18, P301, DOI 10.1108/02651330110396488 De Jong MG, 2008, J MARKETING RES, V45, P104, DOI 10.1509/jmkr.45.1.104 de Langhe B, 2011, J MARKETING RES, V48, P366, DOI 10.1509/jmkr.48.2.366 Dillman DA, 2009, SOC SCI RES, V38, P3, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2008.03.007 Duffy B, 2005, INT J MARKET RES, V47, P615, DOI 10.1177/147078530504700602 Ecommerce Europe, 2015, EUR B2C ECOMM REP 20 Fischer R, 2004, J CROSS CULT PSYCHOL, V35, P263, DOI 10.1177/0022022104264122 Fricker S, 2005, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V69, P370, DOI 10.1093/poq/nfi027 Gopinath M, 2009, INT J RES MARK, V26, P60, DOI 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2008.08.003 GREENLEAF EA, 1992, J MARKETING RES, V29, P176, DOI 10.2307/3172568 GREENLEAF EA, 1992, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V56, P328, DOI 10.1086/269326 Harzing AW, 2006, INT J CROSS CULT MAN, V6, P243, DOI 10.1177/1470595806066332 Hofstede G., 2001, CULTURES CONSEQUENCE Holmqvist J, 2013, SERV IND J, V33, P1659, DOI 10.1080/02642069.2011.638919 Kruglanski A. 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PD DEC PY 2016 VL 33 IS 4 BP 944 EP 960 DI 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2016.05.003 PG 17 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science & Humanities (CPCI-SSH) SC Business & Economics GA EG0QF UT WOS:000390736600017 OA Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Santos, JM Kawabata, Y AF Santos, Jean Margarette Kawabata, Yoshito TI A Path Model of Acculturation, Enculturation, Social Connectedness, and Mental Health Among Asian American/Pacific Islander Immigrants SO JOURNAL OF CROSS-CULTURAL PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE acculturation; enculturation; connectedness; mental health; Asian; Pacific Islander immigrants ID PSYCHOLOGICAL SENSE; SCHOOL MEMBERSHIP; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; DEPRESSION; STRESS; ASSOCIATIONS; ANXIETY; SCALE; BARON AB The present study investigated the indirect effects of acculturation and enculturation on mental health problems (i.e., depression and social anxiety) through social connectedness (i.e., family-, peer-, university-, and neighborhood-connectedness) among Asian American/Pacific Islander (AAPI) immigrant emerging adults in Guam. Participants consisted of 235 (18-30 years old) AAPI immigrant emerging adult students. Online surveys were distributed that contained measures of acculturation and enculturation, family connectedness, peer connectedness, university connectedness, neighborhood connectedness, depression, and anxiety in the university classes and via social media platforms. The results of a path analysis revealed indirect effects of acculturation on depression and anxiety through peer and university connectedness. Limitations, future studies, and the cultural and clinical implications of the findings are discussed. C1 [Santos, Jean Margarette; Kawabata, Yoshito] Univ Guam, Mangilao, GU USA. [Kawabata, Yoshito] Univ Guam, Div Social & Behav Sci, UOG Stn, Mangilao, GU 96923 USA. C3 University of Guam; University of Guam RP Kawabata, Y (corresponding author), Univ Guam, Div Social & Behav Sci, UOG Stn, Mangilao, GU 96923 USA. 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Cross-Cult. Psychol. PD JUN PY 2023 VL 54 IS 4 BP 527 EP 543 DI 10.1177/00220221231169219 EA MAY 2023 PG 17 WC Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA G3GC7 UT WOS:000984183800001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kizgin, H Jamal, A Dwivedi, YK Rana, NP AF Kizgin, Hatice Jamal, Ahmad Dwivedi, Yogesh K. Rana, Nripendra P. TI The impact of online vs. offline acculturation on purchase intentions: A multigroup analysis of the role of education SO JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Online acculturation; Offline enculturation; acculturation; Purchase intentions; Education; Multigroup analysis ID SOCIAL NETWORKING SITE; CONSUMER ACCULTURATION; FIT INDEXES; MEDIA; FAMILIES; LANGUAGE; STUDENTS; COMMUNICATION; IMMIGRANTS; ATTITUDES AB The aim of this research is to determine the extent of online and offline acculturation preferences affecting purchase intentions within a minority ethnic community. This study investigates the role of social media as an agent in terms of how it influences acculturation and consumption. It also investigates the moderating role of education level. The findings highlight the significance of investigating language and friendship orientations and subsequent acculturation preferences. Empirical results confirm the impact of language and friendship orientations on enculturation/acculturation, which in turn impact purchase intentions. The results suggest differences among three groups in terms of their education level. The study discusses contribution to theory and provides future research directions, while offering useful practical implications for marketers. C1 [Kizgin, Hatice; Rana, Nripendra P.] Univ Bradford, Fac Business Law & Social Sci, Richmond Rd, Bradford BD7 1DP, W Yorkshire, England. [Jamal, Ahmad] Cardiff Univ, Cardiff Business Sch, R36,Aberconway Bldg,Colum Rd, Cardiff CF10 3EU, Wales. 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PD JUN PY 2021 VL 130 BP 724 EP 735 DI 10.1016/j.jbusres.2020.05.011 EA MAY 2021 PG 12 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA RZ5SN UT WOS:000648657000011 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ha, JP Ha, JH Han, K AF Ha, Jae-Pil Ha, Jae-Hyun Han, Keunsu TI Online Sport Consumption Motives: Why Does an Ethnic Minority Group Consume Sports in a Native and Host Country through the Internet? SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORT MANAGEMENT RECREATION AND TOURISM LA English DT Article DE online sport motivation; ethnic minority; native country; host country ID MOTIVATION; ACCULTURATION AB Due to the ever-increasing popularity of the Internet, ethnic minority individuals living in a host country can freely follow sports in their native countries through the Internet without any geographic restrictions. In this regard, this study examined differences in online sport consumption motives of South Koreans living in the U.S. between when they consume sports in a native country (South Korea in this study) and when they consume those in a host country (the U.S. in this study). Furthermore, the study attempted to examine the relationship between the online motives and actual usage of sport-related websites in each of the two situations (i.e., consuming sports in South Korea and consuming sports in the U.S. through the Internet). Based on a review of literature on online sport consumption motives, the following eight motives were included in the survey: socialization, information, entertainment, escape, fan expression, pass time, fanship, and technical knowledge. A total of 212 participants were recruited through online and offline surveys. Results of a repeated MANOVA indicated that mean scores for six motives (i.e., socialization, information, entertainment, escape, fan expression, and pass time) were significantly higher in the context of South Korean than American sports. While fanship, entertainment, and pass time motives were significantly related to actual usage of sport-related websites in South Korean sport context, escape, pass time, information, and entertainment motives were significantly related to actual usage of sport-related websites in the American sport context. Implications and future research are also discussed. C1 [Ha, Jae-Pil] Univ Arkansas, Little Rock, AR 72204 USA. [Ha, Jae-Hyun] Keimyung Univ Korea, Daegu, South Korea. [Han, Keunsu] Towson Univ, Towson, MD 21252 USA. C3 University of Arkansas System; University of Arkansas Fayetteville; University of Arkansas Little Rock; Keimyung University; University System of Maryland; Towson University RP Ha, JP (corresponding author), Univ Arkansas, Dept Hlth Sci, Fribourgh Hall 509, Little Rock, AR 72204 USA. EM physicalhjp@gmail.com CR [Anonymous], SMART J [Anonymous], INT J SPORTS MARKETI [Anonymous], SPORT MARKETING Q [Anonymous], 2002, J SPORT BEHAV [Anonymous], SPORTS GAMES PLAY SO Armstrong K. L., 2002, Journal of Sport Behavior, V25, P309 Berry JW, 1997, APPL PSYCHOL-INT REV, V46, P5, DOI 10.1111/j.1464-0597.1997.tb01087.x Bilyeu J., 2002, INT SPORTS J, V6, P93 Cleveland M, 2009, INT J INTERCULT REL, V33, P196, DOI 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2008.12.008 Coakley J., 2006, SPORTS SOC ISSUES C Dittmore S.W., 2008, INT J SPORT COMMUNIC, V1, P384 Filo K., 2011, PRINCIPLES PRACTICES Fink J. 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PY 2013 VL 11 IS D BP 63 EP 89 DI 10.5199/ijsmart-1791-874X-11d PG 27 WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Social Sciences - Other Topics GA V12KZ UT WOS:000214346000001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Pradhananga, P ElZomor, M AF Pradhananga, Piyush ElZomor, Mohamed TI Developing Social Sustainability Knowledge and Cultural Proficiency among the Future Construction Workforce SO JOURNAL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING EDUCATION LA English DT Article ID UNCONSCIOUS BIAS; EDUCATION; STUDENTS; EQUITY; IMPACT AB The construction industry plays a critical role in economic growth, social progress, and environmental protection of communities worldwide to foster sustainable development. Although the construction industry has made significant improvements in environmental and economic sustainability in terms of promoting the adoption of renewable resources, low-carbon communities, and pro-environmental behavior, among others, there is a growing concern for lack of social sustainability in the industry. Social sustainability is a critical component of a community's wellbeing and longevity, yet it is one of the least prioritized concepts in sustainability debates. One of the main causes of social sustainability issues in the construction industry is the lack of education and awareness among the workforce. To address the gap, this research introduces a three-step pedagogical approach in construction education to prepare students in the field by developing cultural proficiency, critical thinking skills, and non-biased verbal communication skills. The study conducted the following three interventions: (1) social media-based learning activity; (2) cocurricular learning (i.e., in-class expert training); and (3) combination of problem-based learning (PBL) and conceptual model development activity (i.e., active learning activity). Overall, 111 students from two consecutive semesters (i.e., summer 2021 and fall 2021) participated in the interventions in three construction management (CM) courses (i.e., Sustainable Construction, Principles of Construction, and Sustainable Approach to Construction) at a minority-serving institution. The research integrated a mixed-method approach through the systematic collection of quantitative and qualitative data using questionnaire surveys and concept maps. A Wilcoxon signed-rank analysis evaluated the quantitative data obtained from the workshop's pre- and post-surveys, whereas the qualitative data were analyzed using sentiment analysis. The obtained results demonstrated the efficacy of the following three interventions: (1) improved collaboration among students through increasing their social network and sharing their perspectives, opinions, and graphical media content more efficiently; (2) increased students' awareness about unconscious biases as well as intercultural, persuasive, and verbal communication skills; and (3) improved their ability to conceptualize ideas and determine the implications of their decisions through concept maps. The findings of this study contribute to two bodies of knowledge. First, they contribute to sustainable construction by encouraging the integration of more robust initiatives on social sustainability education. Additionally, this study also contributes to engineering and construction ethics education by increasing students' awareness about the social dimension of sustainability such as equity, unconscious biases, microaggressions, stereotypes, prejudices, and cultural humility. 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PD APR 1 PY 2023 VL 149 IS 2 AR 04022011 DI 10.1061/(ASCE)EI.2643-9115.0000075 PG 14 WC Education, Scientific Disciplines; Engineering, Multidisciplinary WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC Education & Educational Research; Engineering GA 9C0XR UT WOS:000935151200004 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Chugai, O Pawar, A AF Chugai, Oksana Pawar, Arwind TI STUDYING ENGLISH UNDER COVID-19 QUARANTINE: UKRAINIAN AND INDIAN STUDENTS' PERSPECTIVES SO ADVANCED EDUCATION LA English DT Article DE English; online; distance learning; face-to-face; attitude; grouping; quarantine ID CHALLENGES AB The article deals with Ukrainian and Indian students' perspectives of studying English online during the pandemic. This study was conducted at National Technical University of Ukraine "Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute" and Bharat Vidyalaya, Buldana, Maharashtra, India. A mixed method research design was used in the study: quantitative and qualitative data were obtained from two surveys completed by students anonymously as Google Forms. The research indicated that more Indian than Ukrainian students confirmed that they prepared for the English class. While nearly a third of Ukrainian students' suggestions on effectiveness of English lessons were about speaking and communication, Indian respondents also proposed preparation and revision. Indian students preferred learning something new to grades. Over half of Indian students and a third of Ukrainian students opted for working in groups. From the findings, we can see that most Indian and Ukrainian students had their working space, necessary devices and the Internet connection for studying online. Ukrainian students were more positive about feeling safer with their cameras turned off than Indian students. It was easier for most Indian and Ukrainian students to concentrate in a face-to-face class than in an online class. However, Indian students were mostly positive about studying English online. Most respondents indicated agreement about developing selfdirected learning skills while studying English online. Ukrainian students chose speaking, reading and writing as skills better developed online, while Indian students opted for listening skills. The findings of the research provide valuable information related to students' attitudes towards studying English online considering which may improve teaching and learning distantly. The research results show that despite understanding the necessity of studying online, some students are reluctant to accept it fully. Moreover, there are some intercultural differences related to social distance in the cultures. C1 [Chugai, Oksana] Natl Tech Univ Ukraine, Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytech Inst, Kiev, Ukraine. [Pawar, Arwind] Bharat Vidyalaya, Buldana, India. C3 Ministry of Education & Science of Ukraine; Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute RP Chugai, O (corresponding author), Natl Tech Univ Ukraine, Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytech Inst, Kiev, Ukraine. EM OChugai@meta.ua; arvindupawar@gmail.com RI Chugai, Oksana/I-3827-2017 OI Chugai, Oksana/0000-0002-2118-8255 CR Akilli E, 2019, ADV EDUC, P93, DOI 10.20535/2410-8286.148507 [Anonymous], 2013, VOICES MIDDLE [Anonymous], 2010, TEACHING ENGLISH FOR [Anonymous], 2020, IMP COV 19 HIGH ED W IMP COV 19 HIGH ED W Chang HS, 2020, REV ROMANEASCA PENTR, V12, P111, DOI 10.18662/rrem/12.2Sup1/296 Danley A., 2016, INSIGHT J SCHOLARLY, V11, P48, DOI DOI 10.46504/11201603DA Dogar AA, 2020, REV ROMANEASCA PENTR, V12, P12, DOI 10.18662/rrem/12.2Sup1/285 Gokuladas VK, 2020, REV ROMANEASCA PENTR, V12, P143, DOI 10.18662/rrem/12.2Sup1/300 Graziano S. K, 2016, THESIS SETON HALL U THESIS SETON HALL U, P2234 Lukianenko V, 2020, REV ROMANEASCA PENTR, V12, P62, DOI 10.18662/rrem/12.2Sup1/290 Lusta A. F., 2018, EMERGING TRENDS TECH, P156, DOI [10.4018/978-1-5225-5011-2.ch007, DOI 10.4018/978-1-5225-5011-2.CH007] MARZANO R, 2012, EDUC LEADERSHIP, V70, P80 Mukan N, 2020, REV ROMANEASCA PENTR, V12, P108, DOI 10.18662/rrem/12.1sup2/253 Saienko N, 2020, REV ROMANEASCA PENTR, V12, P151, DOI 10.18662/rrem/12.1sup2/258 NR 14 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 0 U2 9 PU NATL TECHNICAL UNIV UKRAINE KYIV POLYTECHNIC INST, FAC LINGUISTICS PI KYIV PA 37, PEREMOHY AVE, OFFICE 718, BUILDING 7, KYIV, 03056, UKRAINE SN 2409-3351 EI 2410-8286 J9 ADV EDUC JI Adv. Educ. PY 2021 IS 17 BP 4 EP 10 DI 10.20535/2410-8286.213928 PG 7 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA TU1VW UT WOS:000680828800001 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Gouvernet, B Combaluzier, S Sebbe, F Rezrazi, A AF Gouvernet, B. Combaluzier, S. Sebbe, F. Rezrazi, A. TI Plurality and prevalence of sexual motivations in a sample of young francophone adults SO EUROPEAN REVIEW OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE EUROPEENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE APPLIQUEE LA English DT Article DE Sexual motivations; Young adults; Intercultural comparisons; Gender differences; Network analysis ID PAPER-AND-PENCIL; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; ATTACHMENT; BEHAVIOR; INTERNET; PERSONALITY; EXPERIENCES; DIMENSIONS; MOTIVES AB Introduction. - Understanding the motivations that lead to the adoption of sexual behaviors is of major interest to both the individual and public health. Objectives. - This work (i) questions the reasons that lead students from two French universities to adopt sexual behaviors, (ii) examines the motivational similarities and differences between men and women, (iii) compare the results to data from north American subjects. Method. - In total, 657 subjects (526 women; 131 men, mean age: 22.6 years) were requested to take part in an online study investigating sexual behaviors. Reason for Having Sex Questionnaire (Meston Buss, 2007), was used as a basis for the identification of sexual motivations. Result. - On average 53.05 different motivations led to the adoption of sexual behaviors. Significant differences of men/women were found between men and women (72% significant differences in p <0.05) but mainly of small amplitude (d <0.33: 58.33%). Men and women also differ in the structure of interrelations between motivations and by the role played by the different motivations. Overall, female motivational system is more sectorized and more organized than the male system, which seems more resilient (density of interrelations Men: 46.3%; women: 34.2%; distance between motivations: 5.44 vs. 3.86, p < 0.001, d = 2.07). Cultural comparisons showed significant differences of low to moderate amplitude between young adult students in France and those who come from North American universities. Gender differences in sexual motivations for sex were more marked in France than in the US. Conclusion. - Our results argue for a bio-psychosocial and systemic approach of sexual motivations. Theoretical, methodological and practical perspectives are envisaged. (C) 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved. C1 [Gouvernet, B.; Combaluzier, S.; Sebbe, F.; Rezrazi, A.] Normandie Univ, PSY NCA, UNIROUEN, F-76000 Rouen, France. C3 Universite de Rouen Normandie RP Gouvernet, B (corresponding author), Normandie Univ, PSY NCA, UNIROUEN, F-76000 Rouen, France. EM brice.gouvernet@univ-rouen.fr OI gouvernet, brice/0000-0001-9631-102X CR [Anonymous], 2009, J FAMILY REPROD HLTH Bensman L, 2012, SEXUAL MOTIVES SEXUA Brenot P., 2013, FEMMES SEXE AMOUR Brenot P., 2012, HOMMES SEXE AMOUR Brock RL, 2012, ASSESSMENT, V19, P226, DOI 10.1177/1073191110382850 Brousseau MM, 2012, J SEX RES, V49, P533, DOI 10.1080/00224499.2011.574322 BUSS DM, 2003, EVOLUTION DESIRE COHEN J, 1992, PSYCHOL BULL, V112, P155, DOI 10.1037/0033-2909.112.1.155 Cooper E. 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Rev. Appl. Psychol.-Rev. Eur. Psychol. Appl. PD SEP PY 2017 VL 67 IS 5 BP 231 EP 245 DI 10.1016/j.erap.2017.08.002 PG 15 WC Psychology, Applied WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA FN9WH UT WOS:000416393100002 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Li, Q Xue, WQ Gong, WJ Quan, X Li, QL Xiao, LN Xu, D Caine, ED Poleshuck, EL AF Li, Qiao Xue, Wenqing Gong, Wenjie Quan, Xin Li, Quanlei Xiao, Lina Xu, Dong (Roman) Caine, Eric D. Poleshuck, Ellen L. TI Experiences and perceptions of perinatal depression among new immigrant Chinese parents: a qualitative study SO BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Chinese immigrants; Perinatal depression; Help-seeking; Qualitative research ID POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION; HELP-SEEKING; WOMEN; HEALTH; PREVALENCE; AMERICANS; LANGUAGE; CARE AB Background Immigrant status, acculturation level, race and ethnicity have been found to contribute to the utilization of mental health services in the perinatal period. This study explored perinatal experiences and perceptions among Chinese immigrant mothers and their spouses, as well as the possible barriers and facilitators that affect their health care utilization. Methods We recruited 13 women ages 18-35 years born in mainland China, living in Rochester, New York, and residing less than 5 years in the United States. Participants primary language was Mandarin Chinese and all had given birth to at least one live infant within the past 7 years. Participants' age was at least 18 years old at the time of delivery. Five spouses also participated. We divided women in two focus groups and held one focus group for men, with data collection including demographic questionnaires and semi-structured focus group questions conducted in December 2014. Data were analyzed following thematic analysis. Results Four themes emerged: experiences of perinatal depression; perceptions of perinatal depression; general preventive and coping strategies; and attitudes toward the supportive use social media applications (apps) and text messaging during the perinatal period. Participants had limited knowledge of perinatal depression and had difficulty distinguishing between normal perinatal mood fluctuations and more severe symptoms of depression. They discussed immigrant-related stress, conflicts with parents/in-laws while "doing the month", the perceived gap between the ideal of "perfect moms" and reality, and challenges with parenting as the causes of perinatal depression. Women approved of screening for the condition but were conservative about follow-up interventions. As for the management of perinatal depression, participants preferred to deal with the problem within the family before seeking external help, due to potential stigma as well as Chinese traditional culture. They were receptive to obtaining pertinent health information from anonymous social media apps, preferring these to personal text messages. Conclusion The recent immigrant Chinese parents to the United States in the study had limited knowledge of perinatal depression and did not make full use of mental health services for support due to language and cultural barriers. Screening for perinatal depression is only the first step. Future research should explore what interventions may serve as an acceptable approach to overcoming these gaps. C1 [Li, Qiao; Xue, Wenqing; Gong, Wenjie] Cent South Univ, Xiangya Sch Publ Hlth, HER Team, 110 Xiangya Rd, Changsha 410078, Hunan, Peoples R China. [Li, Qiao; Xue, Wenqing; Gong, Wenjie] Cent South Univ, Xiangya Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Maternal & Child Hlth, 110 Xiangya Rd, Changsha 410078, Hunan, Peoples R China. [Gong, Wenjie; Caine, Eric D.] Univ Rochester, Dept Psychiat, Rochester, NY 14642 USA. [Gong, Wenjie] Univ Birmingham, Inst & Appl Hlth Res, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England. [Quan, Xin] Nova Southeastern Univ, Dept Family Therapy, Ft Lauderdale, FL 33314 USA. [Li, Quanlei] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Nursing, Baltimore, MD USA. [Xiao, Lina] East China Univ Sci & Technol, East China Inst Social Dev, Shanghai, Peoples R China. [Xu, Dong (Roman)] Southern Med Univ, Inst Global Hlth, ACACIA Lab Hlth Syst Strengthening, Guangzhou, Peoples R China. [Xu, Dong (Roman)] Southern Med Univ, Sch Hlth Management, Guangzhou, Peoples R China. [Poleshuck, Ellen L.] Univ Rochester, Med Ctr, Dept Psychiat, Rochester, NY 14642 USA. [Poleshuck, Ellen L.] Univ Rochester, Med Ctr, Dept Obstet & Gynecol, Rochester, NY 14642 USA. C3 Central South University; Central South University; University of Rochester; University of Birmingham; Nova Southeastern University; Johns Hopkins University; East China University of Science & Technology; Southern Medical University - China; Southern Medical University - China; University of Rochester; University of Rochester RP Gong, WJ (corresponding author), Cent South Univ, Xiangya Sch Publ Hlth, HER Team, 110 Xiangya Rd, Changsha 410078, Hunan, Peoples R China.; Gong, WJ (corresponding author), Cent South Univ, Xiangya Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Maternal & Child Hlth, 110 Xiangya Rd, Changsha 410078, Hunan, Peoples R China. EM gongwenjie@csu.edu.cn FU NIH Fogarty International Center [D43 TW009101]; Young Scientists Fund (CN) [81402690] FX This study was supported in part by grant D43 TW009101 from the NIH Fogarty International Center and by 81402690 from the Young Scientists Fund (CN). 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PD JUL 26 PY 2021 VL 21 IS 1 AR 739 DI 10.1186/s12913-021-06752-2 PG 9 WC Health Care Sciences & Services WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC Health Care Sciences & Services GA TQ9QC UT WOS:000678609300001 PM 34311719 OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Tian, XL AF Tian, Xiaoli TI Space and personal contacts: Cross-group interaction between mainland and local university students in Hong Kong SO JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS LA English DT Article DE China; cross-group interaction; homophily; intergroup contact theory; international higher education; social media; space; university life ID INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; FRIENDSHIP; ACCULTURATION; SEGREGATION; ATTRACTION; SIMILARITY; PREJUDICE; NETWORKS; DISTANCE; ANXIETY AB Despite sharing physical space that supports contact with out-group members and institutional arrangements that encourage cross-group interaction, many university students still congregate within their own groups. To explain this phenomenon, this study examines the micro-level social processes that prevent or facilitate intergroup interaction. A qualitative study of Mainland Chinese and local university students in Hong Kong reveals that students lack opportunities for mutually engaging experiences across multiple points in time due to fragmented daily living space, defended interpersonal space, and politicized online space, which contribute to the absence of cross-group interactions. Cross-group friendships depend on external forces to remove inhibitions, which then allow emotional bonding. This study contributes to the understanding of cross-group interaction by pointing out the importance of daily routine activities and mutually engaging experiences in influencing cross-group interaction among students. C1 [Tian, Xiaoli] Univ Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. C3 University of Hong Kong RP Tian, XL (corresponding author), Univ Hong Kong, Dept Sociol, Pokfulam, Room 922,Jockey Club Tower,Centennial Campus, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. EM xltian@hku.hk RI Tian, Xiaoli/F-4446-2011 OI Tian, Xiaoli/0000-0002-0257-090X FU Public Policy Research Funding Scheme from the Central Policy Unit of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government [2014.A8.027.15B] FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The research project (Project Number: 2014.A8.027.15B) is funded by the Public Policy Research Funding Scheme from the Central Policy Unit of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government. 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Soc. Pers. Relatsh. PD JAN PY 2019 VL 36 IS 1 BP 63 EP 82 DI 10.1177/0265407517718967 PG 20 WC Communication; Family Studies; Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Family Studies; Psychology GA HE5UQ UT WOS:000453457800004 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Page, D AF Page, Damien TI Conspicuous practice: self-surveillance and commodification in English education SO INTERNATIONAL STUDIES IN SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION LA English DT Article DE Conspicuous practice; surveillance of teachers; performance management; commodification; consumersism ID NEOLIBERALISM; MANAGEMENT; SCHOOLS; CARE AB Teachers in England have always been watched; only more recently have they been surveilled, with senior leaders, peers, students and stakeholders all collecting performance data. Yet surveillance in schools and colleges increasingly relies on watching the self, with teachers voluntarily participating in their own surveillance, making their practice visible for easy consumption by interested parties. This article builds on previous work on the surveillance of teachers to argue that this 'conspicuous practice' represents a convergence of surveillance and consumerism, with teachers being recreated as commodities and their own marketing agent, embodying the entrepreneurial self to maximise employability. Through social media such as Twitter and LinkedIn to exploiting open plan learning spaces, teachers engage in conspicuous practice for three main reasons: from fear, to avoid sanction; as a result of acculturation into commodified environments; as a means of routine resistance, employing the dramaturgical self for personal gain, to avoid work or re-appropriate professionalism. C1 [Page, Damien] Leeds Beckett Univ, Carnegie Sch Educ, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England. C3 Leeds Beckett University RP Page, D (corresponding author), Leeds Beckett Univ, Carnegie Sch Educ, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England. 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Stud. Sociol. Educ. PY 2018 VL 27 IS 4 BP 375 EP 390 DI 10.1080/09620214.2017.1351309 PG 16 WC Sociology WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Sociology GA HJ9XR UT WOS:000457553100004 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Hillyer, GC Schmitt, KM Lizardo, M Reyes, A Bazan, M Alvarez, MC Sandoval, R Abdul, K Orjuela, MA AF Hillyer, Grace Clarke Schmitt, Karen M. Lizardo, Maria Reyes, Andria Bazan, Mercedes Alvarez, Maria C. Sandoval, Rossy Abdul, Kazeem Orjuela, Manuela A. TI Electronic Communication Channel Use and Health Information Source Preferences Among Latinos in Northern Manhattan SO JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Health education; Community education; Health communication; Precision medicine; Genetics; Cancer ID PRECISION MEDICINE; SEEKING; LITERACY; DISPARITIES AB Understanding key health concepts is crucial to participation in Precision Medicine initiatives. In order to assess methods to develop and disseminate a curriculum to educate community members in Northern Manhattan about Precision Medicine, clients from a local community-based organization were interviewed during 2014-2015. Health literacy, acculturation, use of Internet, email, and text messaging, and health information sources were assessed. Associations between age and outcomes were evaluated; multivariable analysis used to examine the relationship between participant characteristics and sources of health information. Of 497 interviewed, 29.4 % had inadequate health literacy and 53.6 % had access to the Internet, 43.9 % to email, and 45.3 % to text messaging. Having adequate health literacy was associated with seeking information from a healthcare professional (OR 2.59, 95 % CI 1.54-4.35) and from the Internet (OR 3.15, 95 % CI 1.97-5.04); having ae grade school education (OR 2.61, 95 % CI 1.32-5.17) also preferred information from their provider; persons > 45 years (OR 0.29, 95 % CI 0.18-0.47) were less likely to use the Internet for health information and preferred printed media (OR 1.64, 95 % CI 1.07-2.50). Overall, electronic communication channel use was low and varied significantly by age with those ae45 years more likely to utilize electronic channels. Preferred sources of health information also varied by age as well as by health literacy and educational level. This study demonstrates that to effectively communicate key Precision Medicine concepts, curriculum development for Latino community members of Northern Manhattan will require attention to health literacy, language preference and acculturation and incorporate more traditional communication channels for older community members. C1 [Hillyer, Grace Clarke] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 722 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032 USA. [Hillyer, Grace Clarke] Columbia Univ, Herbert Irving Comprehens Canc Ctr, Med Ctr, New York, NY 10032 USA. [Schmitt, Karen M.; Reyes, Andria; Bazan, Mercedes; Alvarez, Maria C.; Sandoval, Rossy; Abdul, Kazeem; Orjuela, Manuela A.] Columbia Univ, Herbert Irving Comprehens Canc Ctr, Community & Ambulatory Res Enrollment, Med Ctr, New York, NY 10032 USA. [Schmitt, Karen M.] New York Presbyterian Hosp, Avon Breast Canc Imaging Ctr, New York, NY 10032 USA. [Lizardo, Maria] Manhattan Improvement Corp, New York, NY 10032 USA. [Orjuela, Manuela A.] Columbia Univ, Dept Pediat, Coll Phys & Surg, New York, NY 10032 USA. C3 Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University; NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital; Columbia University RP Hillyer, GC (corresponding author), Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, 722 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032 USA.; Hillyer, GC (corresponding author), Columbia Univ, Herbert Irving Comprehens Canc Ctr, Med Ctr, New York, NY 10032 USA. EM gah28@cumc.columbia.edu RI Hillyer, Grace/AAF-5599-2020 FU National Cancer Institute [P30CA013696-40] FX KMS and MOA were supported by a National Cancer Institute grant (P30CA013696-40). 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Community Health PD APR PY 2017 VL 42 IS 2 BP 349 EP 357 DI 10.1007/s10900-016-0261-z PG 9 WC Health Policy & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Health Care Sciences & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA EN9GM UT WOS:000396308700017 PM 27655586 OA Green Accepted, Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Yoon, J Huang, H Kim, S AF Yoon, JungWon Huang, Hong Kim, Soojung TI Trends in health information-seeking behaviour in the US foreign-born population based on the Health Information National Trends Survey, 2005-2014 SO INFORMATION RESEARCH-AN INTERNATIONAL ELECTRONIC JOURNAL LA English DT Article ID CHINESE IMMIGRANTS; UNITED-STATES; CANCER; INTERNET; ACCULTURATION; COMMUNITY; LANGUAGE; TRUST; NEEDS; WOMEN AB Introduction. This study investigated trends in the health information-seeking behaviour of the U.S. foreign-born population over a ten-year period and examined whether health information disparities between this population and native-born citizens have decreased. Method. Data were collected from six iterations of the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS): HINTS 2 (2005), HINTS 3 (2007), HINTS 4 Cycle 1 (2011), Cycle 2 (2012), Cycle 3 (2013), and Cycle 4 (2014). Analysis. The percentage distribution of all variables across the foreign-born and native-born populations was examined using Chi/squared analysis. Results. Increasing rates of health information-seeking in foreign-born populations as well as Internet use for health information-seeking were observed over the ten-year period. However, compared with the U.S.-born population, the foreign-born population was consistently less likely to seek health information or to use the Internet as its first source for health information and had more difficulty understanding found information. Conclusion. Since the foreign-born population exhibits persistent disparities in accessing and using health information, efforts should be focused on enhancing the accessibility of online health information to this population and improving health information literacy to facilitate use of this information. C1 [Yoon, JungWon; Huang, Hong] Univ S Florida, Sch Informat, 4202 E Fowler Ave,CIS 1040, Tampa, FL 33620 USA. [Kim, Soojung] Chonbuk Natl Univ, Dept Lib & Informat Sci, Jeonju, South Korea. C3 State University System of Florida; University of South Florida; Jeonbuk National University RP Yoon, J (corresponding author), Univ S Florida, Sch Informat, 4202 E Fowler Ave,CIS 1040, Tampa, FL 33620 USA. 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Res. PD SEP PY 2017 VL 22 IS 3 AR 760 PG 21 WC Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Information Science & Library Science GA FR0RW UT WOS:000418771700003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Blayone, TJB Mykhailenko, O Usca, S Abuze, A Romanets, I Oleksiiv, M AF Blayone, Todd J. B. Mykhailenko, Olena Usca, Svetlana Abuze, Anda Romanets, Ihor Oleksiiv, Mykhailo TI Exploring technology attitudes and personal-cultural orientations as student readiness factors for digitalised work SO HIGHER EDUCATION SKILLS AND WORK-BASED LEARNING LA English DT Article DE Workforce readiness; Readiness for digitalised work; Technology attitudes; Information technology; Cultural orientations; Latvia; Ukraine ID COMPUTER SELF-EFFICACY; INDUSTRY 4.0; INTERNET SKILLS; FUTURE; GENDER; PERFORMANCE; SCALE; INFORMATION; COMPETENCES; FRAMEWORK AB Purpose Emerging forms of digitalisation are placing new demands on workforce entrants around the globe. This study, catalysed by innovation programs in Ukraine and Latvia, conceptualises, measures and compares key facets of dispositional readiness of university students in two post-Soviet nations for digitalised work. Design/methodology/approach Survey data, addressing technology attitudes and personal-cultural orientations (PCO), were collected by project teams at universities in Ukraine and Latvia and delivered to the authors for analysis. The authors defined three characteristics of digitalised work, conceptually positioned five of the measured constructs as readiness factors and generated readiness profiles for the two national student cohorts. Investigation of significant differences between the groups was conducted using an Independent SamplesT-Test. A composite profile was produced for comparing the overall dispositional readiness of both groups for digitalised work. Findings The factor-level profiles showed similar patterns of dispositional alignment and misalignment with digitalised work. For example, technology optimism and learning interest were reported by large percentages of Ukrainians and Latvians and tolerance for unstructured work by small percentages. However, significant differences were found in group levels of technology optimism, technology anxiety, ambiguity intolerance and empowered decision-making. In each case, the Ukrainian profile appeared more strongly aligned with the target. Practical implications The global digitalisation of work requires students, educators, human resource professionals and business leaders to rethink workforce readiness assessment and adapt (re)training programs. Technology enthusiasm and learning interest should be regarded as crucial measurable attitudes motivating technical skills development. Also, cultural orientations should be positioned alongside personality traits and digital skills as factors shaping successful human-computer interaction. Originality/value This study initiates a new sociotechnical and cross-cultural trajectory of technology readiness research from data generated in two post-Soviet contexts. Moreover, it positions several measurable dispositions as factors influencing student readiness for digitalised work. C1 [Blayone, Todd J. B.] Ontario Tech Univ, Educ Informat Lab, Oshawa, ON, Canada. [Mykhailenko, Olena] Collaboritsicom, Oshawa, ON, Canada. [Usca, Svetlana] Rezekne Acad Technol, Res Inst Reg Studies, Rezekne, Latvia. [Abuze, Anda] Rezekne Acad Technol, Fac Engn, Rezekne, Latvia. [Romanets, Ihor] Ternopil Natl Econ Univ, Educ & Sci Ctr Informat Technol, Ternopol, Ukraine. [Oleksiiv, Mykhailo] Ternopil Natl Econ Univ, Univ Comp Training Lab, Ternopol, Ukraine. C3 Rezekne Academy of Technologies; Rezekne Academy of Technologies; Ministry of Education & Science of Ukraine; Western Ukrainian National University; Ministry of Education & Science of Ukraine; Western Ukrainian National University RP Blayone, TJB (corresponding author), Ontario Tech Univ, Educ Informat Lab, Oshawa, ON, Canada. EM todd.blayone@ontariotechu.net; olena.mykhailenko@collaboritsi.com; svetlana.usca@rta.lv; anda.abuze@rta.lv; i.romanets@tneu.edu.ua; mik_hail@tneu.edu.ua RI Usca, Svetlana/ABF-6525-2020; Blayone, Todd JB/AAB-6960-2019; Romanets, Ihor/I-6461-2018; Blayone, Todd JB/IVH-2530-2023 OI Usca, Svetlana/0000-0003-1225-3139; Blayone, Todd JB/0000-0001-6965-7033; Romanets, Ihor/0000-0002-7061-6527; FU Implementations of transformative digital learning in doctoral programs of pedagogical science in Latvia [lzp-2018/2-0180]; Gender aspects of digital readiness and development of human capital in region of Ukraine [LV-UA/2018/3]; Gender aspects of digital readiness and development of human capital in region of Latvia [LV-UA/2018/3] FX The authors recognise the participation and tremendous project support of Dr Irena Zogla and Dr Velta Lubkina in Latvia, and Dr Oksana Desyatnyuk in Ukraine. The enthusiastic participation of students at Rezekne Academy of Technologies, Latvia and Ternopil National Economic University, Ukraine was also much appreciated.Funding: Two funded projects provided support for this research: (1) Implementations of transformative digital learning in doctoral programs of pedagogical science in Latvia (lzp-2018/2-0180), and (2) Gender aspects of digital readiness and development of human capital in regions of Ukraine and Latvia (Nr. LV-UA/2018/3). 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Skills Work-based Learn PD JUN 17 PY 2021 VL 11 IS 3 BP 649 EP 671 DI 10.1108/HESWBL-03-2020-0041 EA AUG 2020 PG 23 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA SV9TE UT WOS:000569168800001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Usher, W AF Usher, Wayne TI General practitioners' understanding pertaining to reliability, interactive and usability components associated with health websites SO BEHAVIOUR & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY LA English DT Article DE general practitioners; e-health care; health websites; reliability components; interactive components; usability components AB This study was undertaken to determine the level of understanding of Gold Coast general practitioners (GPs) pertaining to such criteria as reliability, interactive and usability components associated with health websites. These are important considerations due to the increased levels of computer and World Wide Web (WWW)/Internet use and health website recommendations by GPs as a medium for modern e-health care delivery. A survey instrument consisting of 10 single response questions was mailed to 100 of the 410 GPs (24%) practising on Queensland's Gold Coast. The return rate was 90% (n=90/100), (males, 67% [n=60/90]; females, 33% [n=30/90]). Survey questions were designed to measure the percentages (%, n/n) associated with GPs' indicated component understandings and allowed for participants to indicate their (a) gender, (b) age and (c) years of experience (less experienced10 years/more experienced10 years). Participants for this study were randomly chosen from an online telephone directory (http://www.yellowpages.com.au). This study indicates that gender, age and years of experience do affect a GP's understanding pertaining to reliability, interactive and usability components associated with health websites. More precisely, male GPs aged 41-50 who have had 10 years' or more experience as a GP demonstrated the highest overall percentage of component understanding. This study reports that Gold Coast GPs demonstrate a range of understanding and critical appraisal skills used to determine a health website's level of reliability, interactivity and usability, with many reporting a moderate understanding of these components. This study might help to guide future research and policy and assist GPs to develop the skills necessary for the recommendation of health websites and the delivery of effective modern e-health care. Web-based continuing medical education (CME) courses or medical school programmes aimed at educating GPs about health website components may be a future initiative for the healthcare industry. As this is the first Australian study of its type, further cross-cultural studies should be undertaken to explore why gender, age and years of experience affect a GP's health website component understanding. C1 Griffith Univ, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia. C3 Griffith University RP Usher, W (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia. 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Inf. Technol. PY 2009 VL 28 IS 1 BP 39 EP 44 AR PII 908027302 DI 10.1080/01449290802187736 PG 6 WC Computer Science, Cybernetics; Ergonomics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Computer Science; Engineering GA 397BW UT WOS:000262637900004 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Azad, MA Rumman, NS Connolly, R Wanke, P Mumu, JR AF Azad, Md Abul Kalam Rumman, Nazmus Sakib Connolly, Regina Wanke, Peter Mumu, Jinnatul Raihan TI Towards an improved understanding of the antecedents of digital health service loyalty during a pandemic: An fsQCA approach SO SOCIO-ECONOMIC PLANNING SCIENCES LA English DT Article DE Digital health; Loyalty; fsQCA; e-quality ID SET; INTERNET; USERS AB Loyalty towards digital health services has received unprecedented attention and acceptance during the Covid-19 pandemic period. However, whether this popularity will be retained into the future and the factors that can influence such loyalty is undetermined. This paper provides insight into this issue through a cross-cultural examination of the influence of digital service quality (e-quality) on consumer satisfaction and loyalty (e-loyalty) in the digital health service sector during a pandemic. A fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) is applied using a sample of 50 customers drawn from different professions across different countries who actively showed loyalty towards digital health during the pandemic. Research constructs evaluation for reliability and internal consistency was subsequently performed using Cronbach's alpha and Correlation analysis. The results reveal a significant positive relationship between service quality and the twin outcomes of consumer satisfaction and loyalty, while the findings established satisfaction as a prominent mediator for digital health. Findings from the fsQCA analysis identified four core factors that underpin loyalty in digital health platforms. Alternative paths have been identified based on gender, current education status, and other professions. In addition, two topologies are introduced taking digital health services from different platforms during the pandemic. Because of the primary nature of the data, this is first-hand experience gathered from the people who are directly or indirectly involved in receiving help from digital health services in a pandemic context. The application of the fsQCA technique for examining loyalty towards digital health services is applied in the e-health or digital health literature for the first time. The study findings will assist digital health service providers seeking insight into the factors that influence loyalty of e-health service consumers, enabling them to focus more accurately on the service quality dimensions that are effective in influencing consumer satisfaction and retention. The findings of this study contain a number of contributions, illustrating different topologies towards digital health that provide educators and policymakers with valuable insights. C1 [Azad, Md Abul Kalam; Rumman, Nazmus Sakib] Islamic Univ Technol, Dept Business & Technol Management, Gazipur 1704, Bangladesh. [Connolly, Regina] Dublin City Univ, Business Sch, Dublin, Ireland. [Wanke, Peter] COPPEAD Grad Business Sch, Business Analyt & Econ Res Unit, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil. [Mumu, Jinnatul Raihan] Univ Calif Riverside, 900 Univ Ave, Riverside, CA 92521 USA. C3 Dublin City University; University of California System; University of California Riverside RP Wanke, P (corresponding author), COPPEAD Grad Business Sch, Business Analyt & Econ Res Unit, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil. 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Plan. Sci. PD DEC PY 2022 VL 84 AR 101423 DI 10.1016/j.seps.2022.101423 PG 8 WC Economics; Management; Operations Research & Management Science WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics; Operations Research & Management Science GA G8ME0 UT WOS:000991624900005 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kassim, N Abdullah, NA AF Kassim, Norizan Abdullah, Nor Asiah TI The effect of perceived service quality dimensions on customer satisfaction, trust, and loyalty in e-commerce settings A cross cultural analysis SO ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF MARKETING AND LOGISTICS LA English DT Article DE SERVQUAL; Customer satisfaction; Customer loyalty; Electronic commerce; Malaysia; Qatar ID INTERNET BANKING; ACCEPTANCE; SCALES AB Purpose - The paper aims to empirically investigate the relationship between perceived service quality, satisfaction, trust, and loyalty in e-commerce settings in two cultures - Malaysian and Qatari at the level of construct dimensions. Design/methodology/approach - A survey method approach was used in this study. To test the dimensionality of the perceived service quality, all 20 items were analyzed using oblique rotation and varimax rotation. The hypotheses were tested using the structural equations modeling and general linear model of univariate analysis of variance. Findings - Perceived service quality was found to have a significant impact on customer satisfaction. In turn customer satisfaction was found to have a significant effect on trust. Both customer satisfaction and trust have significant effects on loyalty through word of mouth (WOM) while WOM is an antecedent of repeat visits or repurchase intentions. Interestingly, trust does not directly influence the latter. With the exception of the effect of satisfaction on trust, we found no significant difference between the effects of perceived service quality on satisfaction, satisfaction on loyalty, and trust on loyalty among the Qatari and Malaysian customers indicating that the relationships in the model did not hold across the two cultural groups because the respondents have similar cultural background. Research limitations/implications - This study suffers from a limitation in that it uses a convenience sampling technique without a fully matched profile of the respondents. However, the satisfactory fit of the estimated model allows for the study to be a basis of a reliable comparison for future research. Practical implications - In an e-commerce setting companies can increase customer loyalty directly by improving the ease of use, the attractiveness, and the security of their website. Thus, marketers should tailor their marketing strategies to fit each marketing environment because overseas success of their business is very much a function of cultural adaptability. Originality/value - The major contribution of this study is that it is the first attempt to investigate the impact of word of mouth on trust and intention. C1 [Kassim, Norizan] Qatar Univ, Coll Business & Econ, Dept Management & Mkt, Doha, Qatar. [Abdullah, Nor Asiah] Multimedia Univ, Fac Management, Cyberjaya, Malaysia. C3 Qatar University; Multimedia University RP Kassim, N (corresponding author), Qatar Univ, Coll Business & Econ, Dept Management & Mkt, Doha, Qatar. 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PY 2010 VL 22 IS 3 BP 351 EP 371 DI 10.1108/13555851011062269 PG 21 WC Business WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Business & Economics GA V3Y2F UT WOS:000218695200006 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Masoom, MR AF Masoom, Muhammad Rehan TI The digital habitus of the unwedded emerging adults: a sociological interpretation of male-female differences in Facebook behavior SO GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE MEMORY AND COMMUNICATION LA English DT Article DE Bangladesh; Gender differences; Digital habitus; Facebook behavior; Post-industrial society; Structural equation model ID ADOLESCENTS IDENTITY EXPERIMENTS; SELF-PRESENTATION; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; SOCIAL-INFLUENCE; INTERNET; PERSONALITY; LONELINESS; SOCIETY; ONLINE; AFFORDANCES AB Purpose - By considering Facebook as a social context of manifesting digital habitus, this paper aims to explore the differences between men and women in the compensatory use of Facebook, their engagement in crafting and exhibiting virtual self-representation, and addictive traits associated with it. It is argued that while Facebook compensates for the negative consequences of real-world experiences by allowing users, particularly women to display an ideal self or a true virtual self and so aid in socializing, users eventually develop an addiction, which results in various social difficulties. Design/methodology/approach - The study surveyed 511 male and 413 female undergraduate students who were between 19 to 26 years of age and reported being unmarried. Psycho-Social Aspects of Facebook Use Scale was used to solicit the responses. The factors were quantified by the items selected from the scale, and confirmatory factor analysis was used to assess the construct validity and reliability of items to check the usability of the scale in cross-cultural contexts. The Independent Samples t-test was used to check whether statistical evidence exists that the related sample means of men and women vary significantly. Findings - While there is no difference in virtualizing the self by gender; women perceive Facebook as more compensating than men. Likewise, compared with men, women are found to be more self-presenting, more addictive and highly involved in socializing. The item-wise differences show that Facebook comparatively enhances the self-esteem of the women and women are more adventurous than men in Facebook interaction. Originality/value - The study argues that there is a strong connection between the digital habitus and the social world. Social values and conditioning constrain people's intention of being in the digital world and reflect their intention and decisions. Overall, the study is the most elaborative quantitative examination of how men and women differ in their Facebook behavior. C1 [Masoom, Muhammad Rehan] United Int Univ, Sch Business & Econ, Dhaka, Bangladesh. 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Knowl. Mem. Commun. PD JAN 10 PY 2023 VL 72 IS 1/2 BP 24 EP 43 DI 10.1108/GKMC-04-2021-0075 EA OCT 2021 PG 20 WC Information Science & Library Science WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Information Science & Library Science GA 7T3CC UT WOS:000709463000001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Flaudias, V Zerhouni, O Pereira, B Cherpitel, CJ Boudesseul, J de Chazeron, I Romo, L Guillaume, S Samalin, L Cabe, J Begue, L Gerbaud, L Rolland, B Llorca, PM Naassila, M Brousse, G AF Flaudias, Valentin Zerhouni, Oulmann Pereira, Bruno Cherpitel, Cheryl J. Boudesseul, Jordane de Chazeron, Ingrid Romo, Lucia Guillaume, Sebastien Samalin, Ludovic Cabe, Julien Begue, Laurent Gerbaud, Laurent Rolland, Benjamin Llorca, Pierre-Michel Naassila, Mickael Brousse, Georges TI The Early Impact of the COVID-19 Lockdown on Stress and Addictive Behaviors in an Alcohol-Consuming Student Population in France SO FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY LA English DT Article DE COVID-19; Coronavirus; stressors; LockDown; addiction; alcohol; public health ID CROSS-CULTURAL VALIDATION; PERCEIVED STRESS; SUBSTANCE USE; CONSEQUENCES; DRINKING; DEPENDENCE; DISORDERS; MODEL AB Background: This study evaluated factors linked with perceived stress related to the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown and addictive behaviors prior to and during lockdown in a sample of students who indicated engaging in alcohol consumption behaviors before lockdown. Methods: Cross-sectional study. French students from four universities participated in this study, and 2,760 students reported alcohol use. During the first week of lockdown, students reported their perceived levels of stress regarding COVID-19. Substance use and addictive behaviors were reported before and during lockdown, and media exposure, demographical, living conditions, and environmental stressors were reported during lockdown. Results: Women reported greater levels of stress (95% CI: 1.18 to 1.93, p < 0.001). Highly-stressed students also report less social support (95% CI: -1.04 to -0.39, p < 0.001) and were more likely to worry about the lockdown (95% CI: 0.27 to -0.65, p < 0.001). Alcohol-related problemswere more prevalent among the most stressed students (95% CI: 0.02 to 0.09, p = 0.004) as well as eating problems (95% CI: 0.04 to 0.36, p = 0.016) and problematic internet use (95% CI, 0.06 to 0.14, p < 0.001). Students reporting the highest levels of stress also indicated more compulsive eating during the previous seven days (95% CI, 0.21 to 1.19, p = 0.005). Conclusions: The level of stress was strongly related to four categories of variables: (i) intrinsic characteristics, (ii) addictive behaviors before lockdown, (iii) lockdown-specific conditions, and (iv) addictive behaviors during the lockdown. Several variables linked to COVID-19 were not directly linked with perceived stress, while perceived stress was found to correlate with daily life organization-related uncertainty and anticipated consequences of lockdown. Importantly, social support seems to be a protective factor on high level of stress. C1 [Flaudias, Valentin; Pereira, Bruno; de Chazeron, Ingrid; Samalin, Ludovic; Cabe, Julien; Brousse, Georges] CHU Clermont Ferrand, Pole Psychiat B, Clermont Ferrand, France. [Flaudias, Valentin; Pereira, Bruno; de Chazeron, Ingrid; Samalin, Ludovic; Cabe, Julien; Llorca, Pierre-Michel; Brousse, Georges] Univ Clermont Ferrand, EA NPsy Sydo, BP 10448, Clermont Ferrand, France. [Zerhouni, Oulmann] Univ Paris Nanterre, Dept Psychol, Ad Hoc Lab, Lab Parisien Psychol Sociale, Nanterre, France. [Cherpitel, Cheryl J.] Alcohol Res Grp, Emeryville, CA USA. [Boudesseul, Jordane] Univ Lima, Fac Psicol, Inst Invest Cient, Lima, Peru. [Romo, Lucia] Paris Nanterre Univ, UFR SPSE, EA430 CLIPSYD, Nanterre, France. [Romo, Lucia] Univ Paris, GHU Paris Psychiat & Neurosci, CMME, Paris, France. [Guillaume, Sebastien] Univ Montpellier, Dept Emergency Psychiat & Postacute Care, CHRU Montpellier, INSERM U1061, Montpellier, France. [Begue, Laurent] Univ Genoble Apes, LIPC2S, Grenoble, France. [Gerbaud, Laurent] CHU Clermont Ferrand, Serv Sante Publ, Clermont Ferrand, France. [Gerbaud, Laurent] Univ Clermont Auvergne, CNRS UMR 6602, Inst Pascal, Grp PEPRADE,Axe TGI, Clermont Ferrand, France. [Rolland, Benjamin] Univ Lyon 1, Serv Univ Addictol Lyon SUAL, Ctr Hosp Le Vinatier, CRNL,Inserm 01028,CNRS UMR5292,Pole MOPHA, Bron, France. [Naassila, Mickael] Univ Picardie Jules Verne, Grp Rech Alcool & Pharmacodependances, Ctr Univ Rech St, Unite INSERM UMR 1247, Amiens, France. C3 CHU Clermont Ferrand; Alcohol Research Group; Universidad de Lima; UDICE-French Research Universities; Universite Paris Cite; GHU PARIS Psychiatrie Neurosciences; Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (Inserm); Universite de Montpellier; CHU de Montpellier; CHU Clermont Ferrand; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute for Engineering & Systems Sciences (INSIS); Universite Clermont Auvergne (UCA); Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - National Institute for Biology (INSB); UDICE-French Research Universities; Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1; Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (Inserm); Universite Jean Monnet; Picardie Universites; Universite de Picardie Jules Verne (UPJV) RP Flaudias, V (corresponding author), CHU Clermont Ferrand, Pole Psychiat B, Clermont Ferrand, France.; Flaudias, V (corresponding author), Univ Clermont Ferrand, EA NPsy Sydo, BP 10448, Clermont Ferrand, France. EM vflaudias@chu-clermontferrand.fr RI Romo, Lucia/O-1584-2019; Flaudias, Valentin/O-9865-2014; Fond, Guillaume/D-7646-2011; GERBAUD, Laurent/ABY-4952-2022; ROLLAND, Benjamin/H-6625-2019 OI Fond, Guillaume/0000-0003-3249-2030; ROLLAND, Benjamin/0000-0002-8666-3635; Zerhouni, Oulmann/0000-0002-4026-1921; Naassila, Mickael/0000-0002-9788-0918; Romo, Lucia/0000-0002-9432-0528 FU NIH NIAAA grant [R01 AA013750] FX This paper was supported by an NIH NIAAA grant (R01 AA013750). 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Psychiatry PD FEB 9 PY 2021 VL 12 AR 628631 DI 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.628631 PG 13 WC Psychiatry WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychiatry GA QK7VV UT WOS:000620590600001 PM 33633612 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Chen, WS AF Chen, Wenshin TI Exploring digital natives' mobile addiction syndrome in Taiwan: psychological issues and beyond SO INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & PEOPLE LA English DT Article DE Mobile addiction syndrome; Digital natives; Taiwan; Personality traits; Mixed method; Mobile purpose; College students ID PROBLEMATIC SMARTPHONE USE; CELL PHONE USE; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; INTERNET ADDICTION; ACADEMIC-PERFORMANCE; COMPUTER ADDICTION; SELF-REGULATION; ANXIETY; STRESS; PERSONALITY AB Purpose This study seeks to explore digital natives' mobile usage behaviors and, in turn, develop an analytic framework that helps articulate the underlying components of mobile addiction syndrome (MAS), its severity levels and mobile usage purposes. Design/methodology/approach The investigation adopts a survey method and a case study. The results of the former are based on 411 random classroom observations and 205 questionnaire responses, and the insights of the latter are derived from 24 interviews and daily observations. Findings The findings validate five distinctive signs that constitute MAS and their significant correlations with each of the Big Five personality traits. Classroom observations confirm the prevalence of addiction tendency among digital natives in the research context. Seven levels of MAS and six different mobile usage purposes further manifest themselves from case analysis. There appears to be a sharp contrast between the addicted and non-addicted groups in their mobile purposes and behavioral patterns. Additionally, family relationships seem influential in shaping non-addictive mobile usage behaviors. Research limitations/implications Psychological perspectives on MAS may be important but insufficient. Empirical investigation on a global scale, especially with distinctive cross-cultural comparisons, will be highly encouraged. How MAS evolves over time should also serve as future research interests. Practical implications Teaching pedagogy of college education might need certain adjustments to intrigue digital natives' learning interests. Future managers might also need to adopt better performance measurements for digital natives who barely separate work from personal matters in their mobile devices. Social implications Parents and healthcare institutions may need to develop response mechanism to tackle this global issue at home and in society. The long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on MAS might also deserve global attention. Originality/value The analytic framework developed provides an original mechanism that can be valuable in identifying MAS severity and associated behavioral patterns. C1 [Chen, Wenshin] Feng Chia Univ, Int Sch Technol & Management, Taichung, Taiwan. C3 Feng Chia University RP Chen, WS (corresponding author), Feng Chia Univ, Int Sch Technol & Management, Taichung, Taiwan. EM wenshinchen@mail.fcu.edu.tw FU Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 108-2410-H-035-054-MY2] FX This study is supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [Grant number: MOST 108-2410-H-035-054-MY2]. The author is also grateful for reviewers' constructive comments and participants' support. 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Technol. People PD APR 11 PY 2023 VL 36 IS 3 BP 1326 EP 1355 DI 10.1108/ITP-08-2021-0633 EA JUL 2022 PG 30 WC Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Information Science & Library Science GA D4XR2 UT WOS:000820662400001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kim, W Kreps, GL AF Kim, Wonsun (Sunny) Kreps, Gary L. TI The Association between Online Health Information-seeking Behavior and Social Support in Social Networks among Korean Americans SO HEALTH BEHAVIOR AND POLICY REVIEW LA English DT Article DE health information; Internet; Korean Americans; social networks; social support ID MULTIDIMENSIONAL SCALE; ASIAN-AMERICANS; CANCER; INTERNET; CARE; IMMIGRANTS; ACCESS; ACCULTURATION; MORTALITY; VALIDATION AB Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine Korean Americans' (KAs) access to online health information and social support from personal social networks. Method: A cross-sectional online survey of KAs (N = 202) aged 18-49 was conducted. Results: KAs in large social networks had high access to social support from personal social networks. KA women had higher perceived social support than men and were more likely to seek health information online. Conclusion: This study illustrates high use of personal social networks and online channels as important sources of health information and support among KAs, suggesting the utility of employing these channels for health information dissemination with this at-risk population. C1 [Kim, Wonsun (Sunny)] Arizona State Univ, Coll Nursing & Hlth Innovat, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA. [Kreps, Gary L.] George Mason Univ, Dept Commun, Fairfax, VA 22030 USA. C3 Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Downtown Phoenix; George Mason University RP Kim, W (corresponding author), Arizona State Univ, Coll Nursing & Hlth Innovat, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA. EM Sunny.Kim@asu.edu RI Kreps, Gary L/F-7903-2013 OI Kreps, Gary L/0000-0001-5980-129X FU George Mason University's dissertation completion fund FX Gary L. Kreps, PhD, FAAN served as the chair of the dissertation committee and provided primary mentorship for this study. Other committee members Anne Nicotera, PhD, Xiaoquan Zhao, PhD, Carla Fisher, PhD, and Kyeung Mi Oh, PhD, RN also are acknowledged. Recognition also goes to the study participants for their willingness to share their time and experiences with me. This work was supported by the George Mason University's dissertation completion fund. 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PD SEP PY 2014 VL 1 IS 5 BP 381 EP 394 DI 10.14485/HBPR.1.5.4 PG 14 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA VF1XY UT WOS:000442173100004 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Dang, CM Estrada, S Bresee, C Phillips, EH AF Dang, Catherine M. Estrada, Sylvia Bresee, Catherine Phillips, Edward H. TI Exploring Potential Use of Internet, E-mail, and Instant Text Messaging to Promote Breast Health and Mammogram Use among Immigrant Hispanic Women in Los Angeles County SO AMERICAN SURGEON LA English DT Article ID CANCER; KNOWLEDGE; AMERICAN AB Breast cancer is now the leading cause of death in Hispanic women (HW). Internet, e-mail, and instant text messaging may be cost-effective in educating HW about breast health and in reducing breast cancer mortality. We surveyed 905 HW women attending a free health fair about their technology use, acculturation, insurance status, mammography use, and breast cancer knowledge. Data were analyzed by t test or chi(2) tests. Mean age was 51.9 +/- 14.2 years (range, 18 to 88 years). Ninety-two per cent were foreign-born. Most had completed some high school (39%) or elementary (38%) education. Most (62%) were uninsured. The majority spoke (67%) and read (66%) only Spanish. Only 60 per cent of HW older than 40 years had a recent mammogram. HW older than 40 years who had not had a recent mammogram were younger (mean 54.9 +/- 10.8 vs 58 +/- 10.4 years) and less likely to have health insurance (25 vs 44%; P < 0.001). Most HW never use the Internet (58%) or e-mail (64%). However, 70 per cent have mobile phones (66% older than 40 years), and 65 per cent use text messaging daily (58% older than 40 years, P = 0.001). In fact, 45 per cent wish to receive a mammogram reminder by text. Text messaging may be an inexpensive way to promote breast health and screening mammography use among uninsured HW. C1 [Dang, Catherine M.; Estrada, Sylvia; Bresee, Catherine; Phillips, Edward H.] Cedars Sinai Med Ctr, Dept Surg, Saul & Joyce Brandman Breast Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90048 USA. C3 Cedars Sinai Medical Center RP Dang, CM (corresponding author), 310 N San Vicente Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90048 USA. EM dangc@cshs.org RI Bresee, Catherine/A-9148-2015 OI Bresee, Catherine/0000-0002-5710-4906 FU Wasserman Foundation FX This research was supported by a grant from the Wasserman Foundation. 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Surg. PD OCT PY 2013 VL 79 IS 10 BP 997 EP 1000 PG 4 WC Surgery WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC Surgery GA AI6EQ UT WOS:000336964300008 PM 24160786 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ye, J AF Ye, Jiali TI An Examination of Acculturative Stress, Interpersonal Social Support, and Use of Online Ethnic Social Groups among Chinese International Students SO HOWARD JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATIONS LA English DT Article DE acculturation; acculturative stress; Internet; social support ID DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; ELECTRONIC SUPPORT; MENTAL-HEALTH; LIFE STRESS; AMERICAN; PERCEPTIONS; INTERNET; ADJUSTMENT; COLLEGE; WOMEN AB Survey data collected from Chinese international students attending college in the United States explored relationships between acculturative stress, interpersonal social support, and use of online ethnic social groups. Results suggested that students who were more satisfied with their interpersonal support networks had less perceived discrimination, perceived hatred, and negative feelings caused by change, but not less fear. Among the students who had used online ethnic social groups, those who reported receiving higher amounts of online informational support from those groups experienced lower level of acculturative stress. Students who reported obtaining higher amounts of online emotional support also experienced lower level of acculturative stress associated with perceived hatred. A negative relationship was established between interpersonal support network satisfaction and perceived online information support. C1 [Ye, Jiali] Georgia State Univ, Dept Commun, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA. C3 University System of Georgia; Georgia State University RP Ye, J (corresponding author), Georgia State Univ, Dept Commun, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA. 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Commun. PY 2006 VL 17 IS 1 BP 1 EP 20 DI 10.1080/10646170500487764 PG 20 WC Communication WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Communication GA V65IR UT WOS:000211162800001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kanter, R Gittelsohn, J AF Kanter, Rebecca Gittelsohn, Joel TI Measuring Food Culture: a Tool for Public Health Practice SO CURRENT OBESITY REPORTS LA English DT Article DE Food culture; Nutritional anthropology; Public health; Qualitative; Mixed methods ID NUTRITION; ETHNOGRAPHY; ACCULTURATION; ALLOCATION; HABITS; TIME AB Purpose of Review Food culture is a ubiquitous aspect of all societies. This review provides an overview of methods for measuring food culture, and emphasizes the importance of these measures not just for description, but also for strengthening public health practice, primarily through the development of better interventions; to monitor and evaluate changes in diet and nutrition; and for the development of strategies for sustainability and dissemination. Recent Findings Food culture measurement has enriched public health practice through its use of myriad approaches, including interviews, cultural domain analysis, visual methods, observation, time allocation studies, focus groups and community workshops, household studies, and textual analysis. Food culture measurement is essential for public health practice related to food and nutrition, and can lead to, among other outcomes, improved implementation research in nutrition, understanding household dynamics that impact nutritional outcomes, innovative textual analysis to identify food culture through language, and the selection of interventions conveyed through multiple strategies, including digital means, such as via social media. C1 [Kanter, Rebecca] Univ Chile, Fac Med, Dept Nutr, Independencia 1027, Santiago 8380453, Chile. [Gittelsohn, Joel] Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Ctr Human Nutr, Dept Int Hlth, Baltimore, MD USA. C3 Universidad de Chile; Johns Hopkins University; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health RP Kanter, R (corresponding author), Univ Chile, Fac Med, Dept Nutr, Independencia 1027, Santiago 8380453, Chile. EM rkanter@med.uchile.cl; jgittel1@jhu.edu RI Kanter, Rebecca/E-4098-2017 OI Kanter, Rebecca/0000-0003-4867-5448 FU Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo (AIND)-Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (FONDECYT) (ANID-FONDECYT Initiation Research Project) [11170225] FX This research was funded by the Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo (AIND)-Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (FONDECYT) (R.K., ANID-FONDECYT Initiation Research Project grant number 11170225). The Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo-Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico had no role in the design, analysis or writing of this article. 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Obes. Rep. PD DEC PY 2020 VL 9 IS 4 BP 480 EP 492 DI 10.1007/s13679-020-00414-w EA OCT 2020 PG 13 WC Endocrinology & Metabolism; Nutrition & Dietetics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Endocrinology & Metabolism; Nutrition & Dietetics GA OX2WH UT WOS:000583142000001 PM 33128691 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Shin, G Park, K AF Shin, Geiguen Park, Kyungim TI What explains immigrants' national identity? SO CONTINUUM-JOURNAL OF MEDIA & CULTURAL STUDIES LA English DT Article ID AMERICAN IDENTITY; ASSIMILATION; US; IDENTIFICATION; ACCULTURATION; MINORITY AB This study explores the extent to which socio-economic factors in the U.S., and the exposure to the growing popular culture in Korea, influence Korean immigrants' American identity. While a great number of cultural and social psychological studies have identified that socio-economic and intergroup factors have the potential to affect an immigrants' national identity, studies have been negligent in examining the direct impact of popular culture from a sending country, as well as its conditional impact on national identity. In this study, focusing on Korean immigrants, we suggest that the increasing contact with the popular culture of one's home country, through media, may decrease immigrants' host identity. In addition, we suggest that it the impact of socio-economic and intergroup factors on their host identity. Although this study does not find strong evidence that Korean Americans who are more exposed to Korean popular culture through social media are less likely to endorse their American identity, empirical results provide some evidence that exposure to Korean popular culture weakens the effects of socio-economic and intergroup factors on the American national identity of Korean immigrants. C1 [Shin, Geiguen] Rutgers Univ Newark, Sch Publ Affairs & Adm, Newark, NJ 07102 USA. [Park, Kyungim] Univ Missouri, Dept Learning Teaching & Curriculum, English Educ, Columbia, MO USA. C3 Rutgers State University Newark; University of Missouri System; University of Missouri Columbia RP Shin, G (corresponding author), Rutgers Univ Newark, Sch Publ Affairs & Adm, Newark, NJ 07102 USA. 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PY 2018 VL 32 IS 5 BP 594 EP 610 DI 10.1080/10304312.2018.1458819 PG 17 WC Cultural Studies; Communication; Film, Radio, Television WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) SC Cultural Studies; Communication; Film, Radio & Television GA GZ4GG UT WOS:000449351700005 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Han, Q AF Han, Qin TI New in town, already settled in: Assessing the behavioural and experiential indicators that lead to acculturative advantages SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CROSS CULTURAL MANAGEMENT LA English DT Article DE acculturation; learning; management; immigration; MNCs; culture; emerging economies; experience ID INTRA-CULTURAL VARIATION; SOCIAL-MEDIA; INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; BICULTURAL IDENTITY; ADJUSTMENT; IMMIGRATION; INTEGRATION; ADAPTATION; NETWORKS; NEED AB We supplement extant literature on acculturation by introducing a new construct - individual acculturation action profile (IAAP) - consisting of a configuration of behavioural and experiential indicators that reflect an individual's previous and current contact with and participation in other cultures. We operationalise each IAAP indicator individually, and the IAAP construct as an aggregated index (IAAPi), by assigning different weights to each construct indicator based on the magnitude of its theorised influence. We distinguish the antecedents of IAAP at multiple levels. Whilst contextual factors are likely to enhance or hinder people's participation in other cultures, we propose a taxonomy that addresses the dynamism between context and individual initiative. This article thereby expands literature on acculturation, offering notable implications for advantageous acculturative processes and outcomes. The proposed operationalisation of the IAAP construct at the acculturation-organisation nexus can be applied to study many walks of society and outcomes at multiple levels. C1 [Han, Qin] Univ Lethbridge, Calgary, AB, Canada. C3 University of Lethbridge RP Han, Q (corresponding author), Univ Lethbridge, Dhillon Sch Business, 345-6th Ave SE, Calgary, AB T2G 4V1, Canada. EM qin.han.wl@gmail.com FU University of Letbridge; SAGE FX The author disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: An agreement between University of Letbridge and SAGE supported the Open Access license for the publication of this article. 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PD APR PY 2022 VL 22 IS 1 BP 105 EP 135 DI 10.1177/14705958221081631 EA MAR 2022 PG 31 WC Management WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Business & Economics GA 0N4KC UT WOS:000776729600001 OA hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ghorbanzadeh, D Sharbatiyan, M AF Ghorbanzadeh, Davood Sharbatiyan, Mohsen TI The role of website features in creating value co-creation behaviors and enhancing the brand image and reputation of higher education institutions SO INTERACTIVE TECHNOLOGY AND SMART EDUCATION LA English DT Article; Early Access DE Website features; Value co-creation behaviors; Brand image; Brand reputation; Islamic Azad University; Higher education; Social media and learning ID CORPORATE IMAGE; IDENTITY; UNIVERSITIES; ANTECEDENTS; PERSONALITY; ENGAGEMENT; MANAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK; ONLINE; LOGO AB Purpose Despite promising conceptual developments in value co-creation behaviors, the scholarly attention afforded to the importance of the university website features in strengthening the university brand image and reputation through students' value co-creation behaviors is limited. University website features are conceptualized as a hierarchical construct with three dimensions: usability, availability and information. This study aims to investigate the effect of university website features and value co-creation behaviors of students on promoting brand image and brand reputation at Islamic Azad University in Iran. Design/methodology/approach This study is quantitative. Using convenience sampling techniques, a responsive group of 384 students was chosen from the Islamic Azad University of Tehran in Iran. Survey methods were used for data collection. Partial least squares structural equation modeling was used to test the derived hypotheses. Findings The findings of this study indicated that website features have a positive effect on fostering value co-creation behaviors (participation and citizenship behavior), and participation behavior, in turn, improves university brand image and reputation. At the same time, among value co-creation behaviors, citizenship behavior has no impact on the university's brand image. Finally, the brand image formed through website features and participation behavior positively affects brand reputation. Research limitations/implications This study was conducted in the higher education (HE) sector in one cosmopolitan Iranian city (i.e. Tehran), to which Iranians from other cities travel for studying. Thus, the results of this survey include a variety of subcultures. In the future, a study that incorporates all major metropolitan cities of Iran may increase the generalizability of the findings. Unrelated to the purpose of this study, a future research study may extend the currently studied geographical dimensions and examine the antecedents of university brand reputation across different nations using a cross-cultural approach. Practical implications Pragmatically, the findings of this study urge university policymakers, information technology managers and marketers to consider the university website's unique role in assisting co-creation behavior, which in turn promotes university brand image and reputation in the HE market. One of the ways to assess a university's brand image and reputation is through the university ranking system. Ascending the ranking system can allow a university to attract qualified students. Originality/value These findings contribute to the marketing literature by empirically validating the three elements in the website features construct, providing intelligence on how website features can drive value co-creation behaviors, brand image and reputation. Also, results revealed that the brand image of universities positively affects brand reputation. This study highlights the importance of national and international rankings of universities and students' sensitivity to such rankings. Undoubtedly, this is evident in Iranian students' behavior in selecting their university. C1 [Ghorbanzadeh, Davood] Islamic Azad Univ, Tehran North Branch, Dept Business Management, Tehran, Iran. [Sharbatiyan, Mohsen] Islamic Azad Univ, Cent Tehran Branch, Dept Execut Management, Tehran, Iran. C3 Islamic Azad University; Islamic Azad University RP Ghorbanzadeh, D (corresponding author), Islamic Azad Univ, Tehran North Branch, Dept Business Management, Tehran, Iran. 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Technol. Smart Educ. PD 2022 SEP 7 PY 2022 DI 10.1108/ITSE-12-2021-0225 EA SEP 2022 PG 23 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA 4H7CN UT WOS:000850034200001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Cao, C Meng, Q Shang, L AF Cao, Chun Meng, Qian Shang, Liang TI How can Chinese international students' host-national contact contribute to social connectedness, social support and reduced prejudice in the mainstream society? Testing a moderated mediation model SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS LA English DT Article DE Chinese international student; Intergroup contact; Host culture adoption; Social connectedness; Social support; Prejudice ID COMMON INGROUP IDENTITY; INTERGROUP CONTACT; ACCULTURATION STRATEGIES; EXTENDED CONTACT; PERCEIVED DISCRIMINATION; ONLINE COMMUNICATION; INDIVIDUALISM; COLLECTIVISM; ADJUSTMENT; ATTITUDES AB Guided by the contact hypothesis, this study examined host culture adoption of Chinese students sojourning in France as a mediator between their host-national contact (i.e., face-to-face contact and online contact) and social connectedness, perceived social support and reduced prejudice in the mainstream society. We also examined whether face-to-face contact served as a moderator that modified the impacts of online contact. A group of 211 Chinese students in France responded to a web-based survey. Results from structural equation modeling analysis revealed that face-to-face contact significantly predicted Chinese students' adoption of the host culture. Host culture adoption, in turn, influenced social connectedness, perceived social support and prejudice. In contrast, online contact was not predictive of host culture adoption, but had significant direct effects on social connectedness, perceived social support and prejudice. However, direct face-to-face contact did not moderate the relationship between online contact and the predicted variables. Bootstrapping methods were employed to investigate the mediating effects of host culture adoption and revealed that host culture adoption was a full mediator between face-to-face contact and the outcome variables. C1 [Cao, Chun; Meng, Qian] Changchun Univ Sci & Technol, Weixing Rd 7186, Changchun, Jilin, Peoples R China. [Cao, Chun; Meng, Qian] Vrije Univ Brussel, Brussels, Belgium. [Shang, Liang] Jilin Univ, 2699 Qianjin St, Changchun, Jilin, Peoples R China. C3 Changchun University of Science & Technology; Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Jilin University RP Cao, C (corresponding author), Changchun Univ Sci & Technol, Weixing Rd 7186, Changchun, Jilin, Peoples R China. 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PD MAR PY 2018 VL 63 BP 43 EP 52 DI 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2017.12.002 PG 10 WC Psychology, Social; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Social Sciences - Other Topics; Sociology GA GA1TO UT WOS:000428100500005 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Slutskiy, Y AF Slutskiy, Yaroslav TI Practical Use of Media Education Components in the Development of Linguistic and Cultural Patterns by Foreign Students in the Process of their Adaptation Training in the US Higher Education Institutions SO MEDIA EDUCATION-MEDIAOBRAZOVANIE LA English DT Article DE media education components; linguistic and cultural patterns; foreign student; digitalisation; text decoding ID LISTENING COMPREHENSION; LANGUAGE; TECHNOLOGIES; LITERACY; DESIGN; TOOLS AB The article examines the experience of the practical application of video, audio, text and Internet components of media education in the process of formation and development of linguistic and cultural patterns by foreign students at universities and colleges in the US. It focuses on the contribution of linguistic and cultural patterns to more effective acculturation of a foreign student and, subsequently, their ability to have quality interpersonal interactions academically and socially. The analysis of the theoretical framework of the media education components and programs using certain media components is based on research methods such as analysis and synthesis (which allowed separating and combining practical programs and identify existing connections within a program that ensured the integrity of the adaptation training of foreign students), deduction (which, in fact, allowed singling out the video, audio, text and Internet components of media educations in the educational, cultural, linguistic and psychological elements of the acculturation triad), induction (in order to classify the practical programs of the US HEIs by media education components), classification (which provided the interpretation of the Internet direction of adaptation training as a separate component of media education), analogy (demonstrating the existence of close connections and similar characteristics between the media education components, which make them complementary). In the course of examination of the influence of media education on adaptation programs in the US HEIs, we identified the use of four components: video, audio, text and Internet, which are used both for the "direct" (adaptation of foreign students) and "reverse" (adaptation of representatives of the host country) acculturation. The article emphases that media education components can be used simultaneously (leading to the minimisation of their separate use). Since it is important for foreign students to learn about historical and cultural events that had a direct impact on the society of the host country, as well as to form and develop linguistic and cultural patterns, we created a list of films that have had a historical, social and cultural impact on the society of the United States. C1 [Slutskiy, Yaroslav] Donbas State Coll Technol & Management, Toretsk, Ukraine. RP Slutskiy, Y (corresponding author), Donbas State Coll Technol & Management, Toretsk, Ukraine. 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PY 2021 IS 3 BP 529 EP 543 DI 10.13187/me.2021.3.529 PG 15 WC Communication WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Communication GA UM9DP UT WOS:000693624800016 OA Green Published, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Smolenski, DJ Ross, MW Risser, JMH Rosser, BRS AF Smolenski, Derek J. Ross, Michael W. Risser, Jan M. H. Rosser, B. R. Simon TI Sexual compulsivity and high-risk sex among Latino men: the role of internalized homonegativity and gay organizations SO AIDS CARE-PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIO-MEDICAL ASPECTS OF AIDS/HIV LA English DT Article DE sexual compulsivity; homonegativity; Latino; men who have sex with men; condom use ID HIV PREVENTION; BEHAVIOR; HEALTH; ACCULTURATION; RELIABILITY; HOMOPHOBIA; VALIDITY; INTERNET; CITIES AB The objective of this studywas to measure the correlation between compulsive sexual behavior (CSB) and internalized homonegativity(IH) and determine their association with unprotected anal intercourse in Latino men who have sex with men. Nine hundred sixty-three Latino men completed an Internet survey (MINTS study) in 2002 and provided data on two scale exposures. Logistic regression was used to test interactions and generate effect estimates. Higher IH and association with gayorganizations modified the effect of CSB on high-risk sex. Drug and alcohol use also contributed to risk behavior for this subgroup. Overall, CSB had a strong association with high-risk sex. IH and gayorganization membership maymoderate this relationship, which illuminates an additional factor to consider in studying sexual risk-taking. Further work is needed to validate a path from IH and high-risk sex that incorporates drug or alcohol use. C1 [Smolenski, Derek J.; Ross, Michael W.; Risser, Jan M. H.] Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Sch Publ Hlth, Houston, TX USA. [Rosser, B. R. Simon] Univ Minnesota, Sch Publ Hlth, Minneapolis, MN USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Health Science Center Houston; University of Texas School Public Health; University of Minnesota System; University of Minnesota Twin Cities RP Smolenski, DJ (corresponding author), Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Sch Publ Hlth, Houston, TX USA. EM Derek.j.smolenski@uth.tmc.edu OI Rosser, B. R. Simon/0000-0001-8862-531X; Smolenski, Derek/0000-0003-4767-075X; Ross, Michael W./0000-0002-5718-9989 FU NIAID NIH HHS [P30 AI036211] Funding Source: Medline; NIA NIH HHS [AG 63688-01] Funding Source: Medline; NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH063688] Funding Source: Medline CR [Anonymous], 1987, J CHEM DEPEND TREAT, DOI DOI 10.1300/J034V01N01_11 [Anonymous], SEXUAL ADDICTION COM [Anonymous], 1998, LATINO GAY MEN HIV Y [Anonymous], 1998, MODERN EPIDEMIOLOGY Benotsch EG, 2002, ARCH SEX BEHAV, V31, P177, DOI 10.1023/A:1014739203657 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2005, CAS HIV AIDS US DEP Coleman E, 2001, J SEX MARITAL THER, V27, P325, DOI 10.1080/009262301317081070 del Romero J, 2001, AIDS, V15, P1319, DOI 10.1097/00002030-200107060-00019 Diaz Rafael M, 2004, Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol, V10, P255, DOI 10.1037/1099-9809.10.3.255 Diaz RM, 1996, AIDS EDUC PREV, V8, P415 Diaz RM, 2001, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V91, P927, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.91.6.927 DIAZ RM, 2000, FRAMING SEXUAL SUBJE, P191 Finlayson R. 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Aids-Hiv PY 2009 VL 21 IS 1 BP 42 EP 49 AR PII 906600626 DI 10.1080/09540120802068803 PG 8 WC Health Policy & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Respiratory System; Social Sciences, Biomedical WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Health Care Sciences & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Psychology; Respiratory System; Biomedical Social Sciences GA 383FH UT WOS:000261659000006 PM 19085219 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Chen, DW Reyes-Gastelum, D Hawley, ST Wallner, LP Hamilton, AS Haymart, MR AF Chen, Debbie W. Reyes-Gastelum, David Hawley, Sarah T. Wallner, Lauren P. Hamilton, Ann S. Haymart, Megan R. TI Unmet Information Needs Among Hispanic Women with Thyroid Cancer SO JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM LA English DT Article DE thyroid cancer; health literacy; information needs; information seeking behavior; Hispanic women ID SUPPORT NEEDS; ACCULTURATION; QUESTIONS; QUALITY AB Context: Thyroid cancer is the second most common cancer in Hispanic women. Objective: To determine the relationship between acculturation level and unmet information needs among Hispanic women with thyroid cancer. Design: Population-based survey study. Participants: Hispanic women from Los Angeles Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results registry with thyroid cancer diagnosed in 2014-2015 who had previously completed our thyroid cancer survey in 2017-2018 (N = 273; 80% response rate). Main Outcome Measures: Patients were asked about 3 outcome measures of unmet information needs: (1) internet access, (2) thyroid cancer information resources used, and (3) ability to access information. Acculturation was assessed with the Short Acculturation Scale for Hispanics (SASH). Health literacy was measured with a validated single-item question. Results: Participants' median age at diagnosis was 47 years (range 20-79) and 48.7% were low-acculturated. Hispanic women were more likely to report the ability to access information "all of the time" if they preferred thyroid cancer information in mostly English compared to mostly Spanish (88.5% vs 37.0%, P < 0.001). Low-acculturated (vs high-acculturated) Hispanic women were more likely to have low health literacy (47.2% vs 5.0%, P < 0.001) and report use of in-person support groups (42.0% vs 23.1%, P=0.006). Depending on their level of acculturation, Hispanic women accessed the internet differently (P < 0.001) such that low-acculturated women were more likely to report use of only a smartphone (34.0% vs 14.3%) or no internet access (26.2% vs 1.4%). Conclusions: Low-acculturated (vs high-acculturated) Hispanic women with thyroid cancer have greater unmet information needs, emphasizing the importance of patient-focused approaches to providing medical information. C1 [Chen, Debbie W.; Reyes-Gastelum, David; Haymart, Megan R.] Univ Michigan, Div Metab Endocrinol & Diabet, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. [Chen, Debbie W.; Reyes-Gastelum, David; Hawley, Sarah T.; Wallner, Lauren P.; Haymart, Megan R.] Univ Michigan, Dept Internal Med, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. [Hamilton, Ann S.] Univ Southern Calif, Dept Prevent Med, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA. C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Southern California RP Haymart, MR (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Dept Internal Med, Div Metab Endocrinol & Diabet, North Campus Res Complex,2800 Plymouth Rd,Bldg 16, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. EM meganhay@med.umich.edu OI Haymart, Megan/0000-0002-1083-1575 FU National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R01 CA201198]; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [R01 HS024512]; National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [T32DK007245]; California Department of Public Health [103885]; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Program of Cancer Registries [5NU58DP003862-04/DP003862]; NCI's SEER Program [HHSN261201000035C] FX This study is supported by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Grant No. R01 CA201198 with R01 supplement from the Office of Research on Women's Health (ORWH) to Principal Investigator, Dr. Megan Haymart. Dr. Haymart also receives funding from R01 HS024512 from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Dr. Debbie Chen receives support from grant T32DK007245 from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. The collection of cancer incidence data used in this study was supported by the California Department of Public Health pursuant to California Health and Safety Code Section 103885; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Program of Cancer Registries, under Cooperative Agreement No. 5NU58DP003862-04/DP003862; and the NCI's SEER Program under Contract No. HHSN261201000035C awarded to the University of Southern California. The ideas and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors, and endorsement by the State of California Department of Public Health, the NCI, and the CDC or their contractors and subcontractors is not intended nor should be inferred. CR Air M, 2007, THYROID, V17, P259, DOI 10.1089/thy.2006.0300 American Cancer Society, QUE CANC TIR American Thyroid Association, QUE NEC SAB TIR American Thyroid Association, ATA LIST PRINT DOWNL Anderson M., 2016, SMARTPHONES HELP THO [Anonymous], THYR CANC [Anonymous], 2004, INTERNET PHONE MAIL Banach R, 2013, HORM-INT J ENDOCRINO, V12, P428, DOI 10.1007/BF03401308 Brown A., 2016, DIGITAL DIVIDE NARRO Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, THYR CANC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CANC TIR Chang K, 2020, J CANCER EDUC, V35, P1177, DOI 10.1007/s13187-019-01576-5 Chen DW, 2021, THYROID, V31, P752, DOI 10.1089/thy.2020.0497 Chen DW, 2020, CANCER-AM CANCER SOC, V126, P1512, DOI 10.1002/cncr.32670 Chew LD, 2004, FAM MED, V36, P588 Chew LD, 2008, J GEN INTERN MED, V23, P561, DOI 10.1007/s11606-008-0520-5 Dancel LD, 2015, OBESITY, V23, P840, DOI 10.1002/oby.20986 Doubleday AR, 2021, J CANCER EDUC, V36, P850, DOI 10.1007/s13187-020-01713-5 Goldfarb M, 2014, J CANCER SURVIV, V8, P394, DOI 10.1007/s11764-014-0345-7 Hormone Health Network, THYR CANC Hormone Health Network, HOJ INF CANC TIR Husson O, 2014, PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, V23, P946, DOI 10.1002/pon.3514 Katz SJ, 2017, CANCER-AM CANCER SOC, V123, P3022, DOI 10.1002/cncr.30702 Kuenzel U, 2018, J CANCER EDUC, V33, P960, DOI 10.1007/s13187-017-1173-z Kumar M, 2019, 10 AM DON T USE INTE Kutner M., 2006, 2006483 NCES LANCA M, 1994, J LANG SOC PSYCHOL, V13, P315 MARIN G, 1987, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V9, P183, DOI 10.1177/07399863870092005 Miller KD, 2018, CA-CANCER J CLIN, V68, P425, DOI 10.3322/caac.21494 Morley S, 2015, THYROID, V25, P649, DOI 10.1089/thy.2015.0032 National Cancer Institute, CANC TIR VERS PAC National Cancer Institute, THYR CANC PAT VERS National Center for Education Statistics, PROGR INT ASS AD COM Papaleontiou M, 2019, THYROID, V29, P1080, DOI 10.1089/thy.2019.0163 Perrin A., 2019, SMARTPHONES HELP BLA Pew Research Center, 2002, 2002 NAT SURV LAT Ratzan SC, 2000, NATL LIB MED CURRENT Sawka AM, 2016, THYROID, V26, P474, DOI 10.1089/thy.2015.0569 Schwartz SJ, 2010, AM PSYCHOL, V65, P237, DOI 10.1037/a0019330 Sepucha K, 2015, HEALTH EXPECT, V18, P2389, DOI 10.1111/hex.12207 Silveira ML, 2020, ETHNIC HEALTH, V25, P420, DOI 10.1080/13557858.2018.1427219 Thyroid Cancer Survivors' Association, THYR CANC BAS Thyroid Cancer Survivors' Association, INF ESP United States Census Bureau, DET LANG SPOK HOM AB NR 44 TC 6 Z9 6 U1 1 U2 6 PU ENDOCRINE SOC PI WASHINGTON PA 2055 L ST NW, SUITE 600, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA SN 0021-972X EI 1945-7197 J9 J CLIN ENDOCR METAB JI J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. PD JUL PY 2021 VL 106 IS 7 BP E2680 EP E2687 DI 10.1210/clinem/dgab128 EA FEB 2021 PG 8 WC Endocrinology & Metabolism WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Endocrinology & Metabolism GA UN4CC UT WOS:000693963100045 PM 33660770 OA Bronze, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Aguirre, O Marino, R Medina-Solis, C Maupome, G AF Aguirre, Odette Marino, Rodrigo Medina-Solis, Carlo Maupome, Gerardo TI USE OF INTERNET FOR GENERAL AND DENTAL HEALTH ALONG ACCULTURATION FEATURES IN A SAMPLE OF MEXICAN AMERICANS SO ETHNICITY & DISEASE LA English DT Article DE Oral Health; Acculturation; Electronic Health Records; Health Behaviors; Internet Use; Mexican American ID INFORMATION; ADAPTATION AB The objectives of this study were to explore self-reported Internet and electronic platforms used to search for and store medical and dental information among people of Mexican origin. A sample of adults self-identified as European American (250) and as Mexican American (255), residing in Central Indiana, answered a one-time survey that included technology use questions and measured acculturation via the Psychological-Behavioral Acculturation Scale. Overall use of information technologies was estimated through an Information and Communication Technology score. Overall, participants with higher scores searched online for general and oral health information at higher rates than those with lower scores. Younger Mexican Americans and those with higher use scores were more likely to search online for general health information, as were those more psychologically and behaviorally acculturated. Interestingly, Mexican Americans were more likely than European Americans to search online for dental health information. All participants demonstrated high interest in accessing and storing their own health information especially on paper format; storage in other places, such as personal computers, smartphones, or USB flash drives, was less endorsed. Most participants would allow spouses access to their health records; however, there were significant differences between both population groups regarding access given to physicians, dentists and other family members, with Mexican Americans reporting more restrictions. Our findings provide initial information on differential use pattern of electronic health resources among Mexican Americans and suggest that new information technologies reach population groups traditionally underserved; such features may help address disparities in general and dental health. C1 [Aguirre, Odette; Maupome, Gerardo] Indiana Univ Purdue Univ, Sch Dent, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA. [Marino, Rodrigo] Univ Melbourne, Oral Hlth Cooperat Res Ctr, Melbourne Dent Sch, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. [Medina-Solis, Carlo] Autonomous Univ Hidalgo State, Acad Area Dent Hlth Sci Inst, Pachuca, Mexico. [Maupome, Gerardo] Indiana Univ Purdue Univ, Richard M Fairbanks Sch Publ Hlth, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA. [Maupome, Gerardo] Indiana Univ, Network Sci Inst, Bloomington, IN USA. C3 Indiana University System; Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis; University of Melbourne; Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Hidalgo; Indiana University System; Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis; Indiana University System; Indiana University Bloomington RP Maupome, G (corresponding author), Indiana Univ, Hlth Sci Bldg,1050 Wishard Blvd,Suite R2200, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA. EM gmaupome@iu.edu RI Medina-Solis, Carlo Eduado/N-9696-2019 OI Medina-Solis, Carlo Eduado/0000-0002-1410-9491; Marino, Rodrigo/0000-0002-3061-843X FU NIDCR [DE022096-01A1]; Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute [UL1TR001108, RR025761] FX Funded by NIDCR grant DE022096-01A1, and by Project Development Team studies UL1TR001108 and RR025761, Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute. 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Dis. PD FAL PY 2017 VL 27 IS 4 BP 443 EP 452 DI 10.18865/ed.27.4.443 PG 10 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA GF4DP UT WOS:000431911200012 PM 29225446 OA Green Published, Green Submitted, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Clayman, ML Manganello, JA Viswanath, K Hesse, BW Arora, NK AF Clayman, Marla L. Manganello, Jennifer A. Viswanath, K. Hesse, Bradford W. Arora, Neeraj K. TI Providing Health Messages to Hispanics/Latinos: Understanding the Importance of Language, Trust in Health Information Sources, and Media Use SO JOURNAL OF HEALTH COMMUNICATION LA English DT Article ID NATIONAL TRENDS SURVEY; CANCER KNOWLEDGE; CERVICAL-CANCER; CARE; DISPARITIES; BREAST; WOMEN; ACCULTURATION; ETHNICITY; SEEKING AB Health communication is critical to promoting healthy lifestyles and preventing unhealthy behaviors. However, populations may differ in terms of their trust in and use of health information sources, including mass media, the Internet, and interpersonal channels. We used the 2005 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) to test the hypothesis that Hispanics who are less comfortable speaking English would differ from Hispanics who are comfortable speaking English with respect to trust in health information sources and media use. Hispanics/Latinos comprised 9% of the 2005 HINTS sample (n=496). Respondents not born in the United States regardless of race/ethnicity and all Hispanics were asked, oHow comfortable do you feel speaking English?o Responses of ocompletely,o overy,o or onative speakero were combined into ocomfortable speaking Englisho: all other responses were categorized as oless comfortable speaking English.o Those comfortable speaking English reported higher trust for health information from newspapers (p.05), magazines (p.05), and the Internet (p.01) compared with those less comfortable speaking English. They also reported more media exposure: daily hours listening to the radio and watching television (both p.05) and days per week reading newspapers (p.05). Hispanics comfortable speaking English reported much higher levels of Internet use (54% versus 14%, p.0001). Hispanics who are not comfortable speaking English may be difficult to reach, not only because of language barriers and lower trust in media, but also because they report relatively little use of various media channels. These findings have important implications for health communications toward non-native speakers of English in general and Hispanics in particular. C1 [Clayman, Marla L.] Northwestern Univ, Robert H Lurie Comprehens Canc Ctr, Div Gen Internal Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA. [Manganello, Jennifer A.] SUNY Albany, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Policy Management & Behav, Albany, NY USA. [Viswanath, K.] Dana Farber Canc Inst, Boston, MA 02115 USA. [Viswanath, K.] Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Boston, MA 02115 USA. [Hesse, Bradford W.] NCI, Hlth Commun & Informat Res Branch, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA. [Arora, Neeraj K.] NCI, Outcomes Res Branch, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA. C3 Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago; Northwestern University; Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center; State University of New York (SUNY) System; State University of New York (SUNY) Albany; Harvard University; Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Harvard University; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA; NIH National Cancer Institute (NCI); National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA; NIH National Cancer Institute (NCI) RP Clayman, ML (corresponding author), Northwestern Univ, Robert H Lurie Comprehens Canc Ctr, Div Gen Internal Med, 750 N Lake Shore Dr, Chicago, IL 60611 USA. EM m-clayman@northwestern.edu RI Clayman, Marla L/HOI-0411-2023; Clayman, Marla/ABB-3625-2020 OI Clayman, Marla L/0000-0001-8491-3672; Clayman, Marla/0000-0001-8491-3672; Hesse, Bradford/0000-0003-1142-1161 FU NICHD NIH HHS [K12 HD055884-02, K12 HD055884, K12HD055884] Funding Source: Medline CR *AM CANC SOC, 2003, 862300 AM CANC SOC [Anonymous], 2006, EXAMINING HLTH DISPA [Anonymous], LATINOS ONLINE 2006 [Anonymous], 2003, LANGUAGE USE ENGLISH [Anonymous], LATINOS ONLINE COFFEY AJ, 2007, J SPANISH LANGUAGE M, V1, P4 Gilson L, 2003, SOC SCI MED, V56, P1453, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00142-9 Goel MS, 2004, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V292, P2860, DOI 10.1001/jama.292.23.2860 Hesse BW, 2005, ARCH INTERN MED, V165, P2618, DOI 10.1001/archinte.165.22.2618 Hiatt RA, 1999, CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR, V8, P957 Hornik R., 2002, PUBLIC HLTH COMMUNIC, P1, DOI DOI 10.4324/9781410603029 Hunt LM, 2004, SOC SCI MED, V59, P973, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.12.009 JONES S, 2009, GENERATIONS ONLINE 2 Leyden WA, 2005, JNCI-J NATL CANCER I, V97, P675, DOI 10.1093/jnci/dji115 Lloyd-Jones D, 2009, CIRCULATION, V119, pE21, DOI 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.191261 Longo DR, 2005, HEALTH EXPECT, V8, P189, DOI 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2005.00339.x Meissner H I, 1992, J Community Health, V17, P153, DOI 10.1007/BF01324404 National Center for Health Statistics, 2008, HLTH US 2008 Nelson DE, 2004, J HEALTH COMMUN, V9, P443, DOI 10.1080/10810730490504233 Nicholson WK, 2003, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V188, P580, DOI 10.1067/mob.2003.15 O'Malley AS, 1999, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V89, P219, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.89.2.219 O'Malley AS, 1999, AM J PREV MED, V17, P198, DOI 10.1016/S0749-3797(99)00067-7 Parry J, 2005, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V95, P626, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2004.047464 PHILLIPS DP, 1991, NEW ENGL J MED, V325, P1180, DOI 10.1056/NEJM199110173251620 Ramirez AG, 2000, AM J HEALTH PROMOT, V14, P292, DOI 10.4278/0890-1171-14.5.292 Ramirez RR, 2002, HISPANIC POPULATION Stein CJ, 2004, BRIT J CANCER, V90, P299, DOI 10.1038/sj.bjc.6601509 *US ADM AG, 2002, SERV HISP AM ELD *US CENS BUR POP D, 2008, ANN EST POP SEX RAC Vanderpool RC, 2009, J CANCER EDUC, V24, P141, DOI 10.1080/08858190902854772 Viswanath K, 2006, J HEALTH COMMUN, V11, P1, DOI 10.1080/10810730600637426 Viswanath K, 2005, NAT REV CANCER, V5, P828, DOI 10.1038/nrc1718 Webster JG, 2005, J COMMUN, V55, P366, DOI 10.1093/joc/55.2.366 Weinick RM, 2004, MED CARE, V42, P313, DOI 10.1097/01.mlr.0000118705.27241.7c WHISLER K, 2004, HISPANIC PUBLICATION Yanovitzky I, 2000, J HEALTH COMMUN, V5, P117, DOI 10.1080/108107300406857 NR 36 TC 119 Z9 119 U1 0 U2 40 PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC PI PHILADELPHIA PA 325 CHESTNUT ST, SUITE 800, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA SN 1081-0730 J9 J HEALTH COMMUN JI J. Health Commun. PY 2010 VL 15 SU 3 BP 252 EP 263 AR PII 930958227 DI 10.1080/10810730.2010.522697 PG 12 WC Communication; Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Information Science & Library Science GA 693BI UT WOS:000285199200020 PM 21154097 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Celik, S Atak, H Erguzen, A AF Celik, Serkan Atak, Hasan Erguzen, Atilla TI The Effect of Personality on Cyberbullying among University Students in Turkey SO EURASIAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Cyberbullying; personality traits; distance education; path analysis; cluster analysis ID INTERNET USE; SCHOOL; VICTIMIZATION; ADOLESCENTS; AFFILIATION; LONELINESS; TARGETS; VICTIMS; BULLIES AB Problem Statement: Cyberbullying is associated with significant psychological issues among young people such as depression, emotional distress, low self-esteem, and poor academic achievement. It is also regarded as an increasingly emergent problem in educational settings, putting learners' psychological health, safety, and well-being at risk. Recent research has shown that a growing number of students are victims of cyberbullying and a wider realization and a thorough understanding of cyberbullying is needed. Purpose of the Study: This survey-based study set out to explore the relationship between personality traits and cyberbullying among university students receiving education through either face-to-face or distance education modes. Methods: A sectional research design and correlation survey method was adopted throughout the study. As a causal and comparative study, the dependent variable was set as cyberbullying (actively bullying others and/or being bullied) and the independent variable included five personality types. A path model was developed and tested in order to investigate the effects of learning modes and aforementioned personality types on two levels of cyberbullying. Findings and Results: The good fit indexes belonging to the model indicated acceptable conditions and capacity for explaining the relations among the variables. Emotional instability was observed as the leading predictor of being cyberbullied with a medium effect size. On the other hand, the weakest predictor of being bullied was found to be openness to experience with a minor level negative effect size. The developed model was observed to be valid for both face-to-face and distance education learning modes. In addition, a positive and medium level relationship between bullying and being exposed to bullying was observed. Ward's hierarchical cluster analysis conducted on the points obtained from the cyberbullying scale revealed that the majority of the group rarely bullies and is rarely exposed to cyberbullying. Conclusions and Recommendations: This study contributes to the extant literature on bullying in a few conceptual areas. For instance, few research studies have examined the bullying issue in the tertiary context and through learning modes. The current investigation was limited by using a single data set to conduct all analyses. Further research is recommended to involve various variables such as cross-cultural effects on cyberbullying. C1 [Celik, Serkan] Kirikkale Univ, Fac Educ, Dept Comp Educ & Instruct Technol, Kirikkale, Turkey. [Atak, Hasan] Kirikkale Univ, Fac Educ, Dept Educ Sci, Kirikkale, Turkey. [Erguzen, Atilla] Kirikkale Univ, Vocat Coll, Dept Tech Programs, Kirikkale, Turkey. C3 Kirikkale University; Kirikkale University; Kirikkale University RP Celik, S (corresponding author), Kirikkale Univ, Fac Educ, Dept Comp Educ & Instruct Technol, Kirikkale, Turkey. 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Educ. Res. PD FAL PY 2012 VL 12 IS 49 BP 129 EP 150 PG 22 WC Education & Educational Research WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA 052VW UT WOS:000312228300007 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ungvary, R Ittzes, A Bone, V Torok, S AF Ungvary, Renata Ittzes, Andras Bone, Veronika Torok, Szabolcs TI Psychometric properties of the original and short Hungarian version of the Iowa infant feeding attitude scale SO INTERNATIONAL BREASTFEEDING JOURNAL LA English DT Article DE IIFAS; Infant feeding; Attitudes; Breastfeeding duration; Hungary; Reliability; Psychometric properties; Short version ID RELIABILITY; VALIDITY; MOTHERS; ASSOCIATION; KNOWLEDGE; EFFICACY; SUPPORT; WOMEN AB Background The Iowa Infant Feeding Attitude Scale (IIFAS) is a widely used tool to assess attitudes towards infant feeding. Attitudes towards breastfeeding are one of the main influencing factors of feeding choice and breastfeeding duration. Adaptation of the IIFAS to the Hungarian context provides an opportunity for cross-cultural comparisons and helps to target breastfeeding support interventions. The growing number of shortened scales in various fields of research, demonstrates the necessity to adapt to a changing context of data collection to avoid fatigue and dropout among respondents. However, international comparisons are difficult due to the lack of a consensual shortened form of the scale. The aim of our study was to examine the psychometric properties of the Hungarian version of the IIFAS (IIFAS-H) and propose an 8-item short version that has appropriate construct validity. Methods The original IIFAS was translated into Hungarian and then translated back to English. A cross-sectional study based on an internet survey in 2019 was conducted among 553 mothers whose most recent child's age was between 6 and 36 months. Psychometric properties of the Hungarian IIFAS were determined and compared with international results. In order to obtain a shorter version of the Hungarian scale, we preferably kept those items that are common with other international abbreviated IIFAS versions and deleted items with a corrected item-total correlation or factor loading of less than 0.3, where factor loadings came from a principal component analysis forcing the extraction of one principal component (factor). Results The 17-item IIFAS-H showed good psychometric properties with a Cronbach's alpha of0.73. Further analyses proved that the examined three shortened versions of the IIFAS consisting of 11, 9, and 8 items also showed good properties (Cronbach's alpha = 0.79, 0.79, 0.76, respectively). Conclusions The Hungarian version of the original 17-item long IIFAS proved to be a good measurement tool with good psychometric properties. Based on our analyses, we suggest the use of the 8-item short version (IIFAS-H8) of the scale. C1 [Ungvary, Renata; Bone, Veronika; Torok, Szabolcs] Semmelweis Univ, Fac Hlth & Publ Adm, Inst Mental Hlth, Budapest, Hungary. [Ittzes, Andras] Hungarian Univ Agr & Life Sci, Inst Math & Basic Sci, Dept Appl Stat, Budapest, Hungary. [Ittzes, Andras] Budapest Business Sch, Fac Commerce Hospitality & Tourism, Dept Methodol Business Anal, Budapest, Hungary. C3 Semmelweis University; Hungarian University of Agriculture & Life Sciences; Budapest Business School RP Ungvary, R (corresponding author), Semmelweis Univ, Fac Hlth & Publ Adm, Inst Mental Hlth, Budapest, Hungary. EM ungvary.renata@gmail.com RI Ittzes, Andras/GNP-5103-2022 CR Abdulahi M, 2020, INT BREASTFEED J, V15, DOI 10.1186/s13006-020-00269-w AJZEN I, 1991, ORGAN BEHAV HUM DEC, V50, P179, DOI 10.1016/0749-5978(91)90020-T AlKusayer NM, 2018, J HUM LACT, V34, P20, DOI 10.1177/0890334417741296 [Anonymous], 1981, WHO CHRON, V35, P112 Ball HL, 2019, J HUM LACT, V35, P413, DOI 10.1177/0890334419848734 Boros J., 2019, CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK Casal CS, 2017, J HUM LACT, V33, P20, DOI 10.1177/0890334416677029 Cattaneo A, 2006, SEMIN FETAL NEONAT M, V11, P48, DOI 10.1016/j.siny.2005.10.007 Cattaneo A, 2012, BREASTFEED MED, V7, P3, DOI 10.1089/bfm.2012.9999 Chambers Julie A, 2007, Breastfeed Rev, V15, P17 Charafeddine L, 2016, J HUM LACT, V32, P309, DOI 10.1177/0890334415586192 Christophersen T, 2011, INT J HUM-COMPUT ST, V69, P269, DOI 10.1016/j.ijhcs.2010.10.005 Dai HX, 2013, CONTEMP NURSE, V44, P11, DOI 10.5172/conu.2013.44.1.11 Danis I, 2020, EUR J MENT HEALTH, V15, P111, DOI 10.5708/EJMH.15.2020.2.3 De la Mora A, 1999, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V29, P2362, DOI 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1999.tb00115.x Froh E, 2017, ADV NEONAT CARE, V17, P203, DOI 10.1097/ANC.0000000000000370 Ghasemi V, 2019, INT J PEDIATR-MASSHA, V7, P9103, DOI 10.22038/ijp.2018.35698.3117 Ghasemi V, 2018, INT J PEDIATR-MASSHA, V6, P8549, DOI 10.22038/ijp.2018.32372.2852 Ho YJ, 2010, JOGNN-J OBST GYN NEO, V39, P386, DOI 10.1111/j.1552-6909.2010.01153.x Hoeppner BB, 2011, J SUBST ABUSE TREAT, V41, P305, DOI 10.1016/j.jsat.2011.04.005 Holbrook KE, 2013, INT BREASTFEED J, V8, DOI 10.1186/1746-4358-8-7 Inoue M, 2013, ASIA PAC J CLIN NUTR, V22, P261, DOI 10.6133/apjcn.2013.22.2.08 Janke J R, 1992, Appl Nurs Res, V5, P48 Jordan S, 2013, PLOS ONE, V8, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0067912 Kramer MS, 2012, COCHRANE DB SYST REV, DOI 10.1002/14651858.CD003517.pub2 Lau Y, 2016, J HUM LACT, V32, P315, DOI 10.1177/0890334415591813 Minkov M, 2014, MANAGE INT REV, V54, P801, DOI 10.1007/s11575-014-0205-8 Murinko L., 2014, REV SOCIOLOGY, V24, P67 Nanishi K, 2014, J HUM LACT, V30, P346, DOI 10.1177/0890334414534321 Odor A, 2016, VEDONO, V2016, P3 Rollins NC, 2016, LANCET, V387, P491, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)01044-2 Scott JA, 2004, BIRTH-ISS PERINAT C, V31, P125, DOI 10.1111/j.0730-7659.2004.00290.x Scott JA, 2015, BIRTH-ISS PERINAT C, V42, P78, DOI 10.1111/birt.12138 Sittlington J, 2007, HEALTH EDUC RES, V22, P561, DOI 10.1093/her/cyl113 Stanton JM, 2002, PERS PSYCHOL, V55, P167, DOI 10.1111/j.1744-6570.2002.tb00108.x Tomas-Almarcha R, 2016, JOGNN-J OBST GYN NEO, V45, pE26, DOI 10.1016/j.jogn.2016.08.001 Tuthill EL, 2014, INT BREASTFEED J, V9, DOI 10.1186/1746-4358-9-16 Victora CG, 2016, LANCET, V387, P475, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)01024-7 Wallis AB, 2008, ACTA PAEDIATR, V97, P1194, DOI 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2008.00914.x Zakarija-Grkovic I, 2010, CROAT MED J, V51, P396, DOI 10.3325/cmj.2010.51.396 NR 40 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 0 U2 4 PU BMC PI LONDON PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND SN 1746-4358 J9 INT BREASTFEED J JI Int. Breastfeed. J. PD JUL 16 PY 2021 VL 16 IS 1 AR 54 DI 10.1186/s13006-021-00403-2 PG 12 WC Obstetrics & Gynecology; Pediatrics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Obstetrics & Gynecology; Pediatrics GA TJ1QQ UT WOS:000673265600001 PM 34271964 OA Green Published, Green Submitted, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Wu, DZ Lowry, PB Zhang, DS Parks, RF AF Wu, Dezhi Lowry, Paul Benjamin Zhang, Dongsong Parks, Rachida F. TI Patients' compliance behavior in a personalized mobile patient education system (PMPES) setting: Rational, social, or personal choices? SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS LA English DT Article DE Compliance; Adherence; Rational choice theory (RCT); Theory of planned behavior (TPB); mHealth; Cost-benefit analysis; Personalized mobile patient education system (PMPES) ID SECURITY POLICY COMPLIANCE; COMMON METHOD VARIANCE; DECISION-MAKING; INFORMATION; HEALTH; INTERNET; CONSEQUENCES; DETERRENCE; EFFICACY; IMPACT AB Objective: With the advancement of mobile technologies, patients can access medical and patient educational information anytime and anywhere. Computer-aided patient education has been advocated as a key means of interventions for improving patient knowledge and compliance (i.e., adherence). However, evidence of the efficacy of computer-aided patient education remains relatively limited. For example, little is known about how the latest mobile technologies influence patients' compliance intention and their actual compliance behavior. The objective of this study is to investigate patients' compliance intention and behavior using a personalized mobile patient education system (PMPES) as a novel technological intervention for patients based on rational choice theory (RCT) and the theory of planned behavior (TPB). Materials and methods: We conducted a field survey with 125 actual patients in U.S. who obtained their patient education through PMPES while seeking medical treatment advice from their doctors. We used partial least squares (PLS) regression path modeling to test our model. Results: We found that, based on RCT, the benefits of compliance and cost/threat of noncompliance positively influenced intention toward treatment compliance; in contrast, costs of compliance negatively influenced intention toward treatment compliance. However, the benefits of noncompliance had no effect on intention toward treatment compliance. The results also indicated that intention toward treatment compliance, response efficacy, and self-efficacy related to TPB jointly influenced the degree of actual compliance behaviors. Social influence factors including subjective norms and descriptive norms had no influence on patients' actual treatment compliance behavior. Conclusion: Overall, the research model explains 69.2 % of the variance in patients' actual compliance behavior. We find our model robust in using RCT as a key theoretical lens for the assessment of patients' compliance intention to follow medical recommendations enabled by the PMPES and delivered to mobile devices. The factors associated with RCT and TPB jointly influence patients' actual compliance behavior. Future mobile patient education programs should consider patients' age groups, mixed-gender groups, different medical settings, and cross-cultural contexts. C1 [Wu, Dezhi] Univ South Carolina, 550 Assembly St, Columbia, SC 29298 USA. [Lowry, Paul Benjamin] Virginia Tech, 880 West Campus Dr, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA. [Zhang, Dongsong] Univ N Carolina, 9201 Univ City Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28223 USA. [Parks, Rachida F.] Quinnipiac Univ, 275 Mt Carmel Ave, Hamden, CT 06518 USA. C3 University of South Carolina System; University of South Carolina Columbia; Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University; University of North Carolina; University of North Carolina Charlotte; Quinnipiac University RP Wu, DZ (corresponding author), Univ South Carolina, 550 Assembly St, Columbia, SC 29298 USA. EM dezhiwu@cec.sc.edu; paul.lowry.phd@gmail.com; dzhang15@uncc.edu; Rachida.Parks@quinnipiac.edu RI Lowry, Paul Benjamin/A-2790-2008 OI Lowry, Paul Benjamin/0000-0002-0187-5808; Wu, Dezhi/0000-0002-3554-1136 FU University of South Carolina in USA [80002838]; City University of Hong Kong in Hong Kong, China FX This research received partial support from the University of South Carolina in USA [Grant No: 80002838] and City University of Hong Kong in Hong Kong, China. 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PD JAN PY 2021 VL 145 AR 104295 DI 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2020.104295 PG 14 WC Computer Science, Information Systems; Health Care Sciences & Services; Medical Informatics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Computer Science; Health Care Sciences & Services; Medical Informatics GA PH4WA UT WOS:000600413700001 PM 33129124 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Cao, H Zhang, KC Ye, DH Cai, Y Cao, BL Chen, YQ Hu, T Chen, DH Li, LH Wu, SM Zou, HC Wang, ZX Yang, X AF Cao, He Zhang, Kechun Ye, Danhua Cai, Yong Cao, Bolin Chen, Yaqi Hu, Tian Chen, Dahui Li, Linghua Wu, Shaomin Zou, Huachun Wang, Zixin Yang, Xue TI Relationships Between Job Stress, Psychological Adaptation and Internet Gaming Disorder Among Migrant Factory Workers in China: The Mediation Role of Negative Affective States SO FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Internet gaming disorder; job stress; psychological adaptation; negative affective states; factory workers; China ID GENERAL STRAIN THEORY; TO-URBAN MIGRANTS; CIGARETTE-SMOKING; MENTAL-HEALTH; YOUNG-ADULTS; DEPRESSION; ACCULTURATION; ANXIETY; IMMIGRATION; ADDICTION AB Factory workers make up a large proportion of China's internal migrants and may be highly susceptible to job and adaptation stress, negative affective states (e.g., depression and anxiety), and Internet gaming disorder (IGD). This cross-sectional study investigated the relationships between job stress, psychological adaptation, negative affective states and IGD among 1,805 factory workers recruited by stratified multi-stage sampling between October and December 2019. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was conducted to test the proposed mediation model. Among the participants, 67.3% were male and 71.7% were aged 35 years old or below. The prevalence of probable depression, probable anxiety, and IGD was 39.3, 28.7, and 7.5%. Being male, younger age, and shorter duration of living in Shenzhen were associated with higher IGD scores. Job stress was significantly associated with IGD (beta = 0.11, p = 0.01) but not with negative affective states (beta = 0.01, p = 0.77). Psychological adaptation was significantly associated with negative affective states (beta = -0.37, p < 0.001) but not with IGD (beta = 0.09, p > 0.05). Negative affective states were positively associated with IGD (beta = 0.27, p < 0.001). The indirect effect of psychological adaptation (beta = -0.10, p = 0.004) but not job stress (beta = 0.003, p = 0.77) on IGD through negative affective states was statistically significant. The observed psychological correlates and mechanisms are modifiable, and can inform the design of evidence-based prevention programs for depression, anxiety, and IGD in this population. C1 [Cao, He; Zhang, Kechun; Chen, Yaqi; Hu, Tian] Longhua Dist Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Shenzhen, Peoples R China. [Ye, Danhua; Wang, Zixin; Yang, Xue] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Fac Med, JC Sch Publ Hlth & Primary Care, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Cai, Yong] Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Sch Med, Shanghai, Peoples R China. [Cao, Bolin] Shenzhen Univ, Sch Media & Commun, Shenzhen, Peoples R China. [Chen, Dahui] Shenzhen Hlth Dev Res & Date Management Ctr, Shenzhen, Peoples R China. [Li, Linghua] Guangzhou Med Univ, Guangzhou Peoples Hosp 8, Guangzhou, Peoples R China. [Wu, Shaomin; Zou, Huachun] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Publ Hlth Shenzhen, Shenzhen, Peoples R China. [Zou, Huachun] Univ New South Wales, Kirby Inst, Sydney, NSW, Australia. C3 Chinese University of Hong Kong; Shanghai Jiao Tong University; Shenzhen University; Guangzhou Medical University; Sun Yat Sen University; University of New South Wales Sydney; Kirby Institute RP Wang, ZX; Yang, X (corresponding author), Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Fac Med, JC Sch Publ Hlth & Primary Care, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.; Zou, HC (corresponding author), Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Publ Hlth Shenzhen, Shenzhen, Peoples R China.; Zou, HC (corresponding author), Univ New South Wales, Kirby Inst, Sydney, NSW, Australia. 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Psychol. PD MAR 22 PY 2022 VL 13 AR 837996 DI 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.837996 PG 9 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 0I8FB UT WOS:000779648800001 PM 35391955 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Hack-Polay, D Mahmoud, AB Kordowicz, M Madziva, R Kivunja, C AF Hack-Polay, Dieu Mahmoud, Ali B. Kordowicz, Maria Madziva, Roda Kivunja, Charles TI "Let us define ourselves": forced migrants' use of multiple identities as a tactic for social navigation SO BMC PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Displacement; Migrant; Social navigation; Situatedness; Social transactional perspective ID ACCULTURATION STRATEGIES; CONSTRUCTION; IMMIGRATION; MIGRATION; RELIGION; BRITAIN; ASYLUM; SEE AB Background The article examines how and why multiple identities are altered, used and discarded by forced migrants. Methods The research is located in the constructivist paradigm. We used thematic analysis to analyse data gathered through interviews with nineteen forced migrants. Results We found that, though individual migrants can make deliberate choices about which identities to be associated with, they are constrained in the process by external socio-economic factors that lead them to adopt identities that are perceived to be advantageous to navigate the new social system. Moreover, the construction of forced migrants' identity includes significant contextuality, transactionality and situatedness. Conclusions Our research contributes to the literature on migrant identity practice concerning the stigma associated with forced migrant status and the extent to which migrants appraise their reception in exile as undignified. Additionally, examining migrant identities allows the researchers to apprehend the diverse facets of identity as far as migrants are concerned. Future research may draw a larger sample to examine other impactful dimensions of identity fluctuation, e.g. gender, education, social media, the extent of prior trauma, etc. C1 [Hack-Polay, Dieu] Crandall Univ, Moncton, NB, Canada. [Hack-Polay, Dieu; Kordowicz, Maria] Univ Lincoln, Lincoln, England. [Mahmoud, Ali B.] St Johns Univ, New York, NY USA. [Mahmoud, Ali B.] Univ Wales Trinity St David, Lampeter, Dyfed, Wales. [Madziva, Roda] Univ Nottingham, Nottingham, England. [Kivunja, Charles] Univ New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia. C3 University of Lincoln; Saint John's University; University of Wales Trinity St David; University of Nottingham; University of New England RP Hack-Polay, D (corresponding author), Crandall Univ, Moncton, NB, Canada.; Hack-Polay, D (corresponding author), Univ Lincoln, Lincoln, England. 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PD AUG 25 PY 2021 VL 9 IS 1 AR 125 DI 10.1186/s40359-021-00630-6 PG 13 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA UI8AE UT WOS:000690821900001 PM 34433484 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Hoffmann, L Jonsson, PA Meckl, M AF Hoffmann, Lara Jonsson, Porlakur Axel Meckl, Markus TI Migration and community in an age of digital connectivity A survey of media use and integration amongst migrants in Iceland SO NORDICOM REVIEW LA English DT Article DE migrant media use; digital biculturalism; digital connectivity; online and offline migrant integration; survey ID ACCULTURATION; ASSIMILATION; NETHERLANDS; COUNTRY AB Information and communication technologies enable migrants to maintain bonds with multiple communities. Little is known about the association between migrants' connections to their country of origin and different integration practices in online and offline communities in the receiving society. We draw on a survey conducted amongst migrants in Iceland (N = 2,139) and conduct three regression analyses to identify determinants of migrants' use of media and social media from their country of origin. Contrary to other studies, we do not find evidence of reactive transnationalism (i.e., migrants seeking out connections to their places of origin due to dissatisfaction with life in the receiving society) as a response to negative attitudes towards the receiving society. We identify distinct patterns of online and offline integration: Migrants with frequent contact with their countries of origin are less integrated locally in terms of offline activities. However, they are more integrated in digital communities of the receiving society, and use receiving-country media more frequently, thus following a strategy of digital biculturalism. C1 [Hoffmann, Lara; Meckl, Markus] Univ Akureyri, Fac Social Sci, Akureyri, Iceland. [Jonsson, Porlakur Axel] Univ Akureyri, Fac Educ, Akureyri, Iceland. C3 University of Akureyri; University of Akureyri RP Hoffmann, L (corresponding author), Univ Akureyri, Fac Social Sci, Akureyri, Iceland. RI Meckl, Markus/GLN-7594-2022; Meckl, Markus/GLN-4964-2022 OI Meckl, Markus/0000-0001-6639-5592; Hoffmann, Lara/0000-0001-5066-0902; Jonsson, THorlakur Axel/0000-0001-5280-9926 FU Rannis, the Icelandic Centre for Research [184903-051] FX A sincere thank you to Stephanie Barille for her diligent proofreading of this manuscript and thoughtful comments. We also thank those who discussed our manuscript with us at various conferences, especially the participants of the study circle "Understanding Migration" at the Nordic Summer University. This work was supported by Rannis, the Icelandic Centre for Research (grant number 184903-051). 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Rev. PD JAN 1 PY 2022 VL 43 IS 1 BP 19 EP 37 DI 10.2478/nor-2022-0002 PG 19 WC Communication WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Communication GA YW7CZ UT WOS:000753573400002 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ju, B Sandel, TL Thinyane, H AF Ju, Bei Sandel, Todd L. Thinyane, Hannah TI WeChat use of mainland Chinese dual migrants in daily border crossing SO CHINESE JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION LA English DT Article DE vernacular affordances; WeChat; mainland Chinese dual migrants; border crossing ID HONG-KONG; SOCIAL NETWORKING; FACEBOOK USE; MEDIA USE; AFFORDANCES; MIGRATION; ACCULTURATION; MOBILITY; COMMUNICATION; EXPLORATION AB Drawing on data derived from WeChat and the life experiences of its users, this study explores the daily affordances of WeChat in the cross-border lives of dual migrants from the Chinese mainland. In this study, 24 low-skilled Chinese dual migrants from the mainland who were working as security guards and cleaners were recruited to participate in in-depth interviews and group discussions. The lives of these dual migrants are marked politically, socially, and economically by their vulnerable status and by the stresses and vicissitudes that characterize their daily commute between Zhuhai (their place of residence) and Macao (their place of work). Dual migrants from the Chinese mainland use electronic media for support, pleasure, and access to information. One of the main online platforms they utilize is WeChat, a social networking site that is available on mobile phones. By framing these dual migrants' usage of WeChat within the affordances of social media, this social networking site functions as a digital mediated space that provides migrants with communal solidarity, social interaction, access to information, and, in some cases, economic benefits. C1 [Ju, Bei; Thinyane, Hannah] United Nations Univ, Inst Comp & Soc, Macau, Macau Sar, Peoples R China. [Sandel, Todd L.] Univ Macau, Dept Commun, Taipa, Macau Sar, Peoples R China. C3 University of Macau RP Ju, B (corresponding author), United Nations Univ, Inst Comp & Soc, Macau, Macau Sar, Peoples R China. EM jennyju@unu.edu RI Thinyane, Hannah/B-5660-2011; Sandel, Todd/G-8282-2019; Ju, Bei/HJY-1408-2023 OI Sandel, Todd/0000-0003-2781-0786; Thinyane, Hannah/0000-0003-0491-4048; JU, Bei/0000-0001-8324-9001 FU United Nations University [9332] FX The work was supported by the United Nations University under Grant [#9332]. 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J. Commun. PD OCT 2 PY 2019 VL 12 IS 4 BP 377 EP 394 DI 10.1080/17544750.2019.1593207 EA MAY 2019 PG 18 WC Communication WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication GA JF7GC UT WOS:000469713700001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Larios, DB Sam, DL Sandal, GM AF Larios, Dixie Brea Sam, David L. Sandal, Gro Mjeldheim TI Psychological distress among Afghan refugees in Norway as a function of their integration SO FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Afghans; integration; acculturation; depression; anxiety; refugees; psychological integration ID HOPKINS SYMPTOM CHECKLIST-25; POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; MENTAL-HEALTH; SOCIAL SUPPORT; HIGH-INCOME; ACCULTURATION; IMMIGRANTS; COUNTRIES; SEEKING; CARE AB BackgroundOften, refugees are susceptible to mental health problems due to adversities experienced before, during, and after the flight. Through a cross-sectional study, the present study examines the relationship between different aspects of integration and psychological distress among Afghans living in Norway. MethodsThe participants were recruited through e-mail invitations, refugee-related organizations, and social media platforms. The participants (N = 114) answered questions about integration across multiple dimensions (psychological, social, navigational, economic, and linguistic) in line with the Immigration Policy Lab index (IPL -12/24). Hopkins symptoms checklist (HSCL-25) was used to assess psychological distress. ResultsBased on hierarchical multiple regression analysis, both the psychological dimension (0.269 p < 0.01) and the navigational dimension (0.358 p < 0.05) of integration predicted psychological distress. Discussion/ConclusionThe results suggest that the psychological aspects of integration, such as being part of a community, having feelings of security, and a sense of belonging, are beneficial for the mental health and well-being of the Afghans in Norway and contribute further to other aspects of integration. C1 [Larios, Dixie Brea; Sam, David L.; Sandal, Gro Mjeldheim] Univ Bergen, Dept Psychosocial Sci, Bergen, Norway. [Sam, David L.] Univ Bergen, Ctr Int Hlth, Bergen, Norway. C3 University of Bergen; University of Bergen RP Larios, DB (corresponding author), Univ Bergen, Dept Psychosocial Sci, Bergen, Norway. 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Psychol. PD APR 18 PY 2023 VL 14 AR 1143681 DI 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1143681 PG 11 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA E9EC6 UT WOS:000978479000001 PM 37143593 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Alessi, EJ Cheung, S Dentato, MP Eaton, A Craig, SL AF Alessi, Edward J. Cheung, Shannon Dentato, Michael P. Eaton, Andrew Craig, Shelley L. TI A Qualitative Exploration of Information and Communication Technology Use among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer Emerging Adult Migrants Before and After Arrival in the United States SO EMERGING ADULTHOOD LA English DT Article DE lesbian; gay; bisexual; transgender; queer; emerging adults; migration; integration; information and communication technologies; social media ID MENTAL-HEALTH; MINORITY REFUGEES; SEXUAL MINORITY; ACCULTURATION; VICTIMIZATION; EXPERIENCES; IMMIGRANTS; IDENTITY; SUPPORT; RETHINKING AB Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have been shown to facilitate LGBTQ+ emerging adult development as well as international migration. Nonetheless, few studies have examined pre- and post-migration ICT use among LGBTQ+ emerging adult migrants. To fill this knowledge gap, we conducted online interviews with 37 LGBTQ+ individuals (ages 20-25) who migrated from various countries to different U.S. states. Constructivist grounded theory was used to identify four themes: In and out: Balancing identity exploration with identity concealment when using ICTs in the country of origin; relying on ICTs to prepare for migration to the United States; using ICTs to find housing, work, and friends in the United States; and drawbacks of using ICTs in the United States. ICTs facilitated identity development and eased integration but exposed participants to harassment and scams. Findings indicate that closely investigating ICT use can enhance developmental and migration theories, improve research, and inform programs and services. C1 [Alessi, Edward J.; Cheung, Shannon] Rutgers State Univ, New Brunswick, NJ USA. [Dentato, Michael P.] Loyola Univ, Sch Social Work, Chicago, IL 60611 USA. [Eaton, Andrew] Univ Regina, Fac Social Work, Saskatoon Campus, Saskatoon, SK, Canada. [Craig, Shelley L.] Univ Toronto, Factor Inwentash Fac Social Work, Toronto, ON, Canada. C3 Rutgers State University New Brunswick; Loyola University Chicago; University of Regina; University of Toronto RP Alessi, EJ (corresponding author), Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, 390 George St,6th FL,Room 607A, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA. EM ealessi@ssw.rutgers.edu RI Eaton, Andrew David/AAG-9534-2020 OI Eaton, Andrew David/0000-0003-1331-1222; Alessi, Edward/0000-0001-8866-6701; Cheung, Shannon/0000-0002-5806-642X; Dentato, Michael/0000-0002-7793-3090; Craig, Shelley/0000-0002-7991-7764 FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) [895-2018-1000] FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This project was funded by a Partnership Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC Grant #895-2018-1000). 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PD MAY PY 2019 VL 275 BP 71 EP 77 DI 10.1016/j.psychres.2019.02.078 PG 7 WC Psychiatry WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychiatry GA HZ9DQ UT WOS:000469156400010 PM 30878859 OA Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Das, M Saha, V Jebarajakirthy, C Kalai, A Debnath, N AF Das, Manish Saha, Victor Jebarajakirthy, Charles Kalai, Anjana Debnath, Nirmalya TI Cultural consequences of brands? masstige: An emerging market perspective SO JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Masstige; Culture; Ethnic Identity; Acculturation; Consumer Culture Theory; Emerging market ID GLOBAL CONSUMER CULTURE; METHOD VARIANCE; CONFIRMATION BIAS; SCALE DEVELOPMENT; SOCIAL MEDIA; ACCULTURATION; LUXURY; IDENTITY; CONSUMPTION; PERCEPTIONS AB The increase in disposable income and the luxury aspirations of the middle-class have led to the introduction of a new genre of luxury, known as masstige luxury. The extant research has yet to investigate the role of acculturation - changes in an individual's thoughts and behavior that result from (in)direct exposure to culturally dissimilar individuals or groups - in shaping the masstige perception of a brand. The current study addresses this gap by examining how various acculturation patterns (i.e., integration, assimilation, separation, and marginalization) assess the mass-prestige quotient of fashion accessory brands (sunglasses). The study identifies RayBan as a masstige brand in the sunglasses category and observes that the assimilation acculturation group assigned RayBan the highest masstige score, followed by the integration, marginalization, and separation groups. Furthermore, cultural worldview is identified as the underlying mechanism for differences in the masstige scores across various acculturation groups. By explaining the cultural consequences of masstige-based brand consumption, this study contributes to the growing masstige academic literature. C1 [Das, Manish; Kalai, Anjana; Debnath, Nirmalya] Tripura Univ, Dept Business Management, Acad Bldg 10, Bishalgadh 799022, Tripura, India. [Saha, Victor] O P Jindal Global Univ, Sonipat, Haryana, India. [Jebarajakirthy, Charles] Griffith Univ, Griffith Business Sch, Dept Mkt, Gold Coast Campus, Southport, Qld 4222, Australia. C3 Tripura University; O.P. Jindal Global University; Griffith University RP Das, M (corresponding author), Tripura Univ, Dept Business Management, Acad Bldg 10, Bishalgadh 799022, Tripura, India. 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Bus. Res. PD JUL PY 2022 VL 146 BP 338 EP 353 DI 10.1016/j.jbusres.2022.03.081 EA APR 2022 PG 16 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA 1L4QB UT WOS:000799273800004 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ferguson, YL Ferguson, KT Ferguson, GM AF Ferguson, Yuna L. Ferguson, Kim T. Ferguson, Gail M. TI I am AmeriBritSouthAfrican-Zambian: Multidimensional remote acculturation and well-being among urban Zambian adolescents SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Remote acculturation; Zambians; Globalisation; Self-construal; Well-being; Adolescents ID SOCIAL-CHANGE; MODEL; CULTURE; ISSUES; HEALTH; SCALE; SELF; GAP AB One impact of globalisation is that adolescents today are frequently exposed to the values, attitudes and norms of other nations without leaving their own backyards. This may lead to remote acculturation-cultural and psychological changes experienced by non-migrant individuals having indirect and/or intermittent contact with a geographically separate culture. Using quantitative and qualitative data, we examined multidimensional remote acculturation among 83 urban Zambian adolescents who are routinely exposed to U.S., U.K. and South African cultures through traditional and social media and materials/goods. Cluster analyses showed 2 distinct groups of adolescents. "Traditional Zambians, TZs" (55.4%) were significantly more oriented towards Zambian culture and reported a higher level of obligation to their families and greater interdependent self-construal compared with "Westernised Multicultural Zambians, WMZs" (44.6%), who were more oriented towards U.S., U.K. and South African cultures. Furthermore, remote acculturation predicted somewhat lower life satisfaction among WMZs. These results demonstrate that individuals' behaviours, values and identity may be influenced by multiple geographically distant cultures simultaneously and may be associated with psychological costs. C1 [Ferguson, Yuna L.] Truman State Univ, Dept Psychol, 100 East Normal Ave, Kirksville, MO 63501 USA. [Ferguson, Kim T.] Sarah Lawrence Coll, Dept Psychol, Bronxville, NY 10708 USA. [Ferguson, Gail M.] Univ Illinois, Dept Human & Community Dev, Urbana, IL USA. C3 Sarah Lawrence College; University of Illinois System; University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign RP Ferguson, YL (corresponding author), Truman State Univ, Dept Psychol, 100 East Normal Ave, Kirksville, MO 63501 USA. EM yferguson@truman.edu OI Ferguson, Gail/0000-0002-7865-5352 FU Research Development Grant from Penn State University FX This research was funded by the Research Development Grant from Penn State University, awarded to Yuna Ferguson. Each author made major contributions to the article. 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TI Disparities in Access to HIV Prevention Among Men of Mexican Descent Living in the Midwestern United States SO JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH LA English DT Article DE HIV prevention; Mexican men; Access; Health disparities; Immigrants ID HEALTH-CARE; TESTING RATES; RISK BEHAVIOR; HISPANIC MEN; LATINOS; ACCULTURATION; SERVICES; BARRIERS; LANGUAGE; IMPACT AB Men of Mexican descent (MMD) in the U.S. are disproportionately affected by HIV. Understanding MMD's access to HIV prevention is necessary to reduce their transmission rates. We explored disparities in access to HIV prevention among MMD of different assimilation status, healthcare access, and sexual risk behavior. 322 Midwestern MMD completed a survey assessing their access to passive interventions (e.g., lectures), interactive interventions (e.g., counseling), HIV testing, media information, and information from the Internet. 64% MMD had received passive interventions, 36% interactive interventions, 42% HIV testing, 41% information from media, and 12% from the Internet. MMD who were less assimilated to the U.S., had lower healthcare access, and were at risk for HIV, were less likely to have accessed prevention interventions but more likely to have received media information. Access to HIV prevention among Midwestern MMD is tied to their assimilation and healthcare access. Findings have implications for developing strategies of intervention delivery. C1 [Glasman, Laura R.; Weinhardt, Lance S.; Hackl, Kristin L.] Med Coll Wisconsin, Ctr AIDS Intervent Res, Dept Psychiat & Behav Med, Milwaukee, WI 53202 USA. C3 Medical College of Wisconsin RP Glasman, LR (corresponding author), Med Coll Wisconsin, Ctr AIDS Intervent Res, Dept Psychiat & Behav Med, 2071 N Summit Ave, Milwaukee, WI 53202 USA. 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Immigr. Minor. Health PD DEC PY 2011 VL 13 IS 6 BP 1125 EP 1133 DI 10.1007/s10903-010-9373-1 PG 9 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 839JO UT WOS:000296361700020 PM 20686851 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Wang, WR Yu, N AF Wang, Weirui Yu, Nan TI Coping with a New Health Culture: Acculturation and Online Health Information Seeking Among Chinese Immigrants in the United States SO JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Acculturation; Online health information seeking; Language choice; Web source choice; Chinese immigrants ID INTERNET; LITERACY; BARRIERS; EVALUATE; SCALE AB As a culturally diverse country, the U.S. hosts over 39 million immigrants who may experience various cultural and linguistic obstacles to receiving quality health care. 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Extant mergers and acquisitions (M&A) studies report that differences in the organizational culture are important in the cultural integration process. Frequently, M&A research assumes organizational cultures to be homogeneous and unified, but a large body of organizational literature suggests that organizations should be understood as heterogeneous living worlds in which employees construct their own subcultures. The paper focuses on the question of how such subcultures affect the long-term cultural integration of merged firms. A 12-year longitudinal field study in the Netherlands examined the integration of iPioneer into Telcom. The findings of the study show how three subcultures in iPioneer influenced the cultural integration process. The paper makes a contribution to the academic debate on cultural integration in domestic M&A by acknowledging that the numerous coexisting subcultures influence cultural integration in the complex process of post-acquisition integration. C1 [van Marrewijk, Alfons] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Org Sci, Fac Social Sci, De Boelelaan 1081, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands. C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam RP van Marrewijk, A (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Org Sci, Fac Social Sci, De Boelelaan 1081, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands. 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J. MANAGE. PD FEB PY 2016 VL 27 IS 2 BP 338 EP 354 DI 10.1111/1467-8551.12135 PG 17 WC Business; Management WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA DI8RO UT WOS:000373769000007 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Carlini, BH Safioti, L Rue, TC Miles, L AF Carlini, Beatriz H. Safioti, Luciana Rue, Tessa C. Miles, Lyndsay TI Using Internet to Recruit Immigrants with Language and Culture Barriers for Tobacco and Alcohol Use Screening: A Study Among Brazilians SO JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Recruitment; Internet; Limited English proficiency; Immigrants; Alcohol; Tobacco ID NICOTINE DEPENDENCE; ONLINE; AMERICANS; LATINO; ACCULTURATION; PROFICIENCY; CONSUMPTION; RETENTION; FACEBOOK; RECEIPT AB Limited English proficient (LEP) individuals face disparities in accessing substance abuse treatment, but little is known on how to reach this population. This study aimed to test online recruitment methods for tobacco and alcohol screening among LEP Portuguese speakers. The study was advertised in Portuguese using Facebook, Google, online newsletters and E-mail. Participants clicked ads to consent and access a screening for tobacco and alcohol dependence. Ads yielded 690 screening responses in 90 days. Respondents had a mean age of 42.7 (SD 12), with a higher proportion of women than men, 95 % born in Brazil with high levels of LEP and low levels of acculturation. Facebook ads yielded 41.4 % of responses, and were the lowest cost recruitment channel ($8.9, $31.10 and $20.40 per respondent, hazardous drinker and smoker, respectively). Online recruitment of LEP populations is feasible. Future studies should test similar strategies in other LEP groups. C1 [Carlini, Beatriz H.; Safioti, Luciana] Univ Washington, Alcohol & Drug Abuse Inst, Seattle, WA 98105 USA. [Rue, Tessa C.] Univ Washington, Dept Biostat, Ctr Biomed Stat, Seattle, WA 98105 USA. [Miles, Lyndsay] Alere Wellbeing, Res Dept, Seattle, WA 98104 USA. C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; Alere RP Carlini, BH (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Alcohol & Drug Abuse Inst, 1107 NE 45th St,Suite 120, Seattle, WA 98105 USA. 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Immigr. Minor. Health PD APR PY 2015 VL 17 IS 2 BP 553 EP 560 DI 10.1007/s10903-013-9934-1 PG 8 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA CE0UW UT WOS:000351524000030 PM 24563138 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lindsay, AC Le, Q Nogueira, DL Machado, MMT Greaney, ML AF Lindsay, Ana Cristina Le, Qun Nogueira, Denise L. Machado, Marcia M. T. Greaney, Mary L. TI Sources of information about gestational weight gain, diet and exercise among Brazilian immigrant women living in the USA: a cross-sectional study SO PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION LA English DT Article DE Pregnancy; Gestational weight gain; Information; Brazilian; Internet; USA ID PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; SEEKING BEHAVIORS; HEALTH; INTERVENTIONS; OVERWEIGHT; SUPPORT; ADVICE AB Objective: The objective of this study was to assess sources of information about gestational weight gain (GWG), diet and exercise among first-time pregnant Brazilian women in the USA. Design: Cross-sectional survey. Setting: Massachusetts, USA. Participants: First-time pregnant Brazilian women. Results: Eighty-six women, the majority of whom were immigrants (96 center dot 5 %) classified as having low acculturation levels (68 %), participated in the study. Approximately two-thirds of respondents had sought information about GWG (72 center dot 1 %), diet (79 center dot 1 %) and exercise (74 center dot 4 %) via the internet. Women classified as having low acculturation levels were more likely to seek information about GWG via the internet (OR = 7 center dot 55; 95 % CI 1 center dot 41, 40 center dot 26) than those with high acculturation levels after adjusting for age and receiving information about GWG from healthcare provider (doctor or midwife). Moreover, many respondents reported seeking information about GWG (67 %), diet (71 %) and exercise (52 %) from family and friends. Women who self-identified as being overweight pre-pregnancy were less likely to seek information about diet (OR = 0 center dot 32; 95 % CI 0 center dot 11, 0 center dot 93) and exercise (OR = 0 center dot 33; 95 % CI 0 center dot 11, 0 center dot 96) from family and friends than those who self-identified being normal-weight pre-pregnancy. Conclusions: This is the first study to assess sources of information about GWG, diet and exercise among pregnant Brazilian immigrants in the USA. Findings have implications for the design of interventions and suggest the potential of mHealth intervention as low-cost, easy access option for delivering culturally and linguistically tailored evidence-based information about GWG incorporating behavioural change practices to this growing immigrant group. C1 [Lindsay, Ana Cristina] Univ Massachusetts, Coll Nursing & Hlth Sci, Dept Exercise & Hlth Sci, 100 Morrissey Blvd, Boston, MA 02125 USA. [Le, Qun] Rutgers Univ State Univ New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ USA. [Nogueira, Denise L.; Machado, Marcia M. T.] Univ Fed Ceara, Dept Community Hlth, Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil. [Greaney, Mary L.] Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Hlth Studies, Kingston, RI 02881 USA. C3 University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Boston; Rutgers State University New Brunswick; Universidade Federal do Ceara; University of Rhode Island RP Lindsay, AC (corresponding author), Univ Massachusetts, Coll Nursing & Hlth Sci, Dept Exercise & Hlth Sci, 100 Morrissey Blvd, Boston, MA 02125 USA. EM ana.lindsay@umb.edu RI ; Machado, MARCIA/J-9614-2014 OI Lindsay, Ana Cristina/0000-0002-2520-0493; Machado, MARCIA/0000-0002-0149-5792 FU Joseph P. Healey grant, University of Massachusetts Boston FX This study was funded by the Joseph P. Healey grant, University of Massachusetts Boston. 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PD DEC PY 2021 VL 24 IS 17 BP 5720 EP 5729 AR PII S1368980021001798 DI 10.1017/S1368980021001798 PG 10 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Nutrition & Dietetics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Nutrition & Dietetics GA XA6WP UT WOS:000720784600017 PM 33904387 OA Green Published, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Sanchez, D Wagner, KM Hamilton, E Singletary, M AF Sanchez, Delida Wagner, Kevin M. Hamilton, Emma Singletary, Myya TI Where You Learn About Sex Matters: Sexual Information Sources During Adolescence and Current Sexual Values and Sexual Behaviors in Latinx Emerging Adults SO JOURNAL OF LATINX PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article; Early Access DE sources of sexual information; sexual values; Latinx emerging adults ID BIRTH-ORDER; AFRICAN-AMERICAN; PERCEIVED PEER; CONDOM USE; COMMUNICATION; PARENTS; ACCULTURATION; GENDER; EDUCATION; SOCIALIZATION AB The present study examined the links between sexual information sources (SIS) during adolescence and current sexual values (SVS) and sexual behaviors (SBS) among 268 Latinx (84% Mexican origin) emerging adults (60.7% women). Chi-square analyses were conducted to test for differences in SIS and SVS based on gender and immigrant generation. Hierarchical regression analyses were then performed to examine the hypothesized relations between SIS, SVS, and SBS and whether gender moderated these associations. Men endorsed SIS peers, SVS Comfort, and SVS Satisfying One's Sexual Needs, as well as the number of sexual partners to a higher degree than women. SIS mothers and SIS teachers were positively linked to SVS Virginity as Important; SIS teachers were negatively linked to SVS Comfort, SVS Sexual Self-Acceptance, and the number of sexual partners; SIS siblings and SIS internet were positively linked with SVS Communication. Gender was found to moderate the associated links between SIS mothers and SVS Sexual Satisfaction of Needs whereby men with low SIS mothers reported higher SVS Sexual Satisfaction of Needs. Findings suggest a complex association between sources of SIS, SVS, and SBS and highlighted the important role of mothers, siblings, teachers, and the internet as SIS.Public Significance StatementWe sampled 268 Latinx college students about where they learned about sex during adolescence and how this was related to their current values around sex and their sexual behaviors. We found that mothers, siblings, teachers, and the internet had an important influence on shaping their beliefs about sex during adolescence, and this was related to how they currently communicate about sex and how many sexual partners they had. The findings are important for tailoring programs aimed at reducing risky sex among Latinx young adults. C1 [Sanchez, Delida] Univ Maryland, Dept Counseling Higher Educ & Special Educ, 3115 Benjamin Bldg,3942 Campus Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA. [Wagner, Kevin M.; Singletary, Myya] Univ Texas Austin, Dept Educ Psychol, Austin, TX USA. [Hamilton, Emma] Univ Mexico, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Sch Med, Albuquerque, NM USA. C3 University System of Maryland; University of Maryland College Park; University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin RP Sanchez, D (corresponding author), Univ Maryland, Dept Counseling Higher Educ & Special Educ, 3115 Benjamin Bldg,3942 Campus Dr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA. 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Latinx Psychol. PD 2023 JUN 15 PY 2023 DI 10.1037/lat0000233 EA JUN 2023 PG 20 WC Psychology, Clinical; Psychology, Developmental; Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA J5GC7 UT WOS:001009891500001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Camacho-Rivera, M Gonzalez, CJ Morency, JA Blake, KD Calixte, R AF Camacho-Rivera, Marlene Gonzalez, Christopher J. Morency, Jason Amilcar Blake, Kelly D. Calixte, Rose TI Heterogeneity in Trust of Cancer Information among Hispanic Adults in the United States: An Analysis of the Health Information National Trends Survey SO CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION LA English DT Article ID SEEKING; LATINOS; ACCULTURATION; PREVALENCE; INTERNET; SUBGROUPS; MORTALITY; LITERACY; MISTRUST; SERVICES AB Background: Hispanics are differentially burdened by inequities in cancer outcomes. Increasing knowledge about cancer and cancer services among Hispanics may aid in reducing inequities, but little is known about what information sources are considered most effective or most trusted by this diverse population. The goal of this study was to examine heterogeneity in trust of cancer information from various media sources among U.S. Hispanic adults. Methods: Using data from the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) 4, Cycles 2 and 4 and HINTS 5, Cycle 2, we examined nine trust questions, divided into four domains of health communication sources [doctor, government health/charitable organizations, media (including Internet), and family/friends and religious organizations]. Independent variables examined were gender, Hispanic ethnic categories (Mexican American, Cuban/Puerto Rican, and other Hispanics), age, education, income, language, and nativity. We used multivariable logistic regression with survey weights to identify independent predictors of cancer information source use and trust. Results: Of the 1,512 respondents, trust in sources ranged from 27% for radio to 91% for doctors. In multivariable models, Cubans/Puerto Ricans were twice as likely to trust cancer information from print media compared with Mexican Americans. Hispanics 75 years and older were nearly three times as likely to trust cancer information from religious organizations compared with those ages 18 to 34. Hispanic women were 59% more likely to trust cancer information from the Internet compared with men. Conclusions: Subgroup variability in source use and trust may be masked by broad racial and ethnic categories. Impact: Among Hispanics, there is significant variation by ethnicity and other sociodemographics in trust of sources of cancer information across multiple constructs, with notable implications for disseminating cancer information. C1 [Camacho-Rivera, Marlene] SUNY Downstate Hlth Sci Univ, Dept Community Hlth Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Brooklyn, NY USA. [Gonzalez, Christopher J.] Weill Cornell Med Coll, Dept Med, New York, NY USA. [Morency, Jason Amilcar; Calixte, Rose] CUNY, Sch Med, Dept Community Hlth & Social Med, New York, NY 10031 USA. [Blake, Kelly D.] NCI, Hlth Commun & Informat Res Branch, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA. C3 Cornell University; Weill Cornell Medicine; City University of New York (CUNY) System; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA; NIH National Cancer Institute (NCI) RP Camacho-Rivera, M (corresponding author), SUNY Downstate Hlth Sci Univ, Brooklyn, NY 11203 USA. 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Biomarkers Prev. PD JUL PY 2020 VL 29 IS 7 BP 1348 EP 1356 DI 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-19-1375 PG 9 WC Oncology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Oncology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA MQ0ZU UT WOS:000552627400010 PM 32611616 OA Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Abbas, M Sitharthan, G Hough, MJ Hossain, SZ AF Abbas, Mae Sitharthan, Gomathi Hough, Michael J. Hossain, Syeda Zakia TI An exploratory study of acculturation among Muslims in Australia SO SOCIAL IDENTITIES LA English DT Article DE Acculturation; Australian Muslims; ethnic identity; self-Identity; generations ID MENTAL-HEALTH; UNITED-STATES; SELF-IDENTITY; ADOLESCENTS; SCALE; IMMIGRANTS; MIGRATION; DISTRESS; STUDENTS; MODEL AB Muslims constitute 2.2% of the Australian population. Given the current socio-political climate and the limited research, the present exploratory study explores the relationship between acculturation, ethnic identity, self-identity, generational status, religiosity, and demographics among adult Australian Muslims. A cross-sectional convenience sample of 324 adult Australian Muslims completed either online or paper-based questionnaires in either English or Arabic. Recruitment was via convenience sampling and social media advertisements. Acculturation, ethnic identity (MEIM), religiosity, and demographic variables were measured. The study sample was young and mostly female, with high religiosity levels. Acculturation was negatively correlated with ethnic identity. From multiple regression analysis, acculturation was predicted independently by religiosity (low), age (young), gender (male) and ethnic identity (low). First generation Australian Muslims were older, had stronger ethnic identity and religiosity, and more commonly self-identified as non-Australian. By contrast second- and third-generation were more likely to self-identify as bicultural or Australian. In summary, acculturation of Australian Muslims is influenced by multiple variables, particularly ethnic identity, religiosity, and generation; hence all these variables need to be included in policy regarding successful integration of migrants. C1 [Abbas, Mae; Sitharthan, Gomathi; Hossain, Syeda Zakia] Univ Sydney, Discipline Behav & Social Sci Hlth, Fac Hlth Sci, Lidcombe, Australia. [Hough, Michael J.] Univ Technol Sydney, Grad Sch Hlth, Broadway, Australia. C3 University of Sydney; University of Technology Sydney RP Abbas, M (corresponding author), Univ Sydney, Discipline Behav & Social Sci Hlth, Fac Hlth Sci, Lidcombe, Australia. 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Ident. PY 2018 VL 24 IS 6 BP 764 EP 778 DI 10.1080/13504630.2018.1500279 PG 15 WC Ethnic Studies WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Ethnic Studies GA GU4PR UT WOS:000445266400006 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Aguilar-Rodriguez, IE Arias-Bolzmann, LG AF Aguilar-Rodriguez, Iliana E. Arias-Bolzmann, Leopoldo G. TI Lifestyle and Purchase Intention: The Moderating Role of Education in Bicultural Consumers SO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL CONSUMER MARKETING LA English DT Article DE Acculturation/biculturalism; purchase intention; activities; interests; and opinions; theory of planned behavior; bicultural consumer ID COUNTRY-OF-ORIGIN; ASIAN-AMERICAN ACCULTURATION; PLANNED BEHAVIOR; MARKET-SEGMENTATION; SOCIAL MEDIA; CHOICE; MODEL; ETHNOCENTRISM; ENCULTURATION; INTERESTS AB This research is the first to analyze the relationship between lifestyles and purchase intentions in first-generation bicultural consumers residing in Canada. It applies the Activities, Interests, and Opinions (AIO) model and the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and includes education level as a moderating variable to find differences in consumption between the country of origin and the host country. A total of 194 personal surveys were administered. The data were analyzed using structural equation modeling and one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), suggesting that subjective norm predicts purchase intention, being positively related to Health and Optimism and Household Oriented and Industrious, and negatively related to Self-reliance and Leadership. A negative impact was found between the education level and the subjective norm, which was significant concerning the host country. The study also revealed that the subjective norm is positively related to Health and Optimism and negatively related to Self-reliance and Leadership, improving the model's predictive accuracy when the educational level is involved. 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Int. Consum. Mark. PD JAN 1 PY 2023 VL 35 IS 1 BP 30 EP 46 DI 10.1080/08961530.2021.2020702 EA DEC 2021 PG 17 WC Business WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Business & Economics GA 9F6FF UT WOS:000734831000001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Howe, C Matthews, LR Heard, R AF Howe, Caroline Matthews, Lynda R. Heard, Robert TI Work to retirement: A snapshot of psychological health in a multicultural Australian population SO WORK-A JOURNAL OF PREVENTION ASSESSMENT & REHABILITATION LA English DT Article DE Acculturation; retirement transition; wellbeing; Internet research ID SOCIAL SUPPORT; MENTAL-HEALTH; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; MEXICAN-AMERICAN; STRESS-DISORDER; UNITED-STATES; WELL; LIFE; SATISFACTION; PREVALENCE AB Objective: The specific aim of this study was to explore psychological well-being in workers and retirees and compare responses from people who came from an overseas-born population and those from an Australian born. Participants: Participants were self-selected, voluntary, informed research participants aged 50 years and older. One hundred and ninety-five people born in Australia and retiring in Australia and 91 people born overseas retiring in Australia responded to an internet-based survey that comprised the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale, the PTSD Checklist, the Satisfaction with Life Scale and the Duke Social Support Index. Method: Two-way analysis of variance was conducted for dependent variables against: (1) being born in Australia Yes/No, and (2) Retired/Employed. Results: In terms of adjustment to retirement the findings indicate no significant differences in psychological symptoms during the retirement transition phase between populations. Conclusion: Further research needs to be carried out to consider the role of possible explanatory factors that may contribute to the psychological transition to retirement. C1 [Howe, Caroline; Matthews, Lynda R.; Heard, Robert] Univ Sydney, Ageing Work & Hlth Res Unit, Fac Hlth Sci, Lidcombe, NSW 1825, Australia. C3 University of Sydney RP Howe, C (corresponding author), Univ Sydney, Ageing Work & Hlth Res Unit, Fac Hlth Sci, Lidcombe, NSW 1825, Australia. 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Support was obtained for all hypotheses. In particular, evidence was obtained for the continued presence, in the immigrants, of the culture-transmission motive postulated by the theory: the desire to maintain the culture of origin and transmit it to the next generation. Support was also obtained for the hypothesized anchoring of the culture-transmission motive in more basic motives fulfilled by cultural groups, the relative intra- and intergenerational stability of the culture-transmission motive, and its motivating effects for action tendencies and desires that support cultural transmission under the difficult conditions of migration. Furthermore, the findings suggest that the assumption that people have a culture-transmission motive belongs to the folk psychology of sociocultural groups, and that immigrants regard the fulfillment of this desire as a moral right. C1 [Mchitarjan, Irina] Univ Greifswald, Inst Sci Educ, D-17487 Greifswald, Germany. 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S., 2002, DARWINS CATHEDRAL EV NR 70 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 1 U2 11 PU PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE PI SAN FRANCISCO PA 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA SN 1932-6203 J9 PLOS ONE JI PLoS One PD NOV 3 PY 2015 VL 10 IS 11 AR e0141625 DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0141625 PG 22 WC Multidisciplinary Sciences WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Science & Technology - Other Topics GA CV1QH UT WOS:000364032600044 PM 26529599 OA gold, Green Published, Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT B AU Chang, T Wong, RP AF Chang, Tai Wong, Richie Phu BE Liu, WM Iwamoto, DK Chae, MH TI Using the Internet to Provide Support, Psychoeducation, and Self-Help to Asian American Men SO CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE COUNSELING WITH ASIAN AMERICAN MEN SE Routledge Series on Counseling with Boys and Men LA English DT Article; Book Chapter ID HEALTH-SERVICES; SOCIAL-PSYCHOLOGY; SEEKING; ATTITUDES; GENDER; ACCULTURATION; ILLNESS; WILLINGNESS; ORIENTATION; DEPRESSION AB Tony is a 19-year-old, second-generation Chinese American male college student attending a large university in California. He is lonely, does not have any close friendships at school, and feels conflicted about his friendships with his White friends, who think that Asian American students on campus are "cliquey." He feels angry at his White friends for their views, but is also angry at his Asian American friends for hanging out mostly among themselves. He does not have anyone to talk to about his feelings, thinks that seeking help from a counselor is a sign of weakness, which he is not about to show, and thus feels alone in his experiences. Like most college students, Tony uses a computer and accesses the Internet on a daily basis. He has visited several Web sites that publish content related to Asian Americans and has posted comments on some of them. He also has an account on Facebook, where he has friends from all over the United States, some of whom he has never met face to face. C1 [Chang, Tai] Alliant Int Univ, Calif Sch Profess Psychol, San Francisco, CA 94133 USA. 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Aggregating three national representative samples of U.S. immigrants from the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) conducted between 2008 and 2013, our results from trend analyses and logistic regressions revealed that the U.S. immigrants exhibited an increasing trend on two types of e-health engagement: tracking personal health information online and communicating with a doctor online. But we did not find any significant change in the other two e-health activities throughout these years: the percentage of immigrants who sought a health provider online remained moderate (about 37%), whereas the percentage of immigrants who joined an online support group kept low (about 5%). Furthermore, immigrants of different race/ethnicity or length of residence in the United States showed different trends of e-health engagement. Asian immigrants and immigrants with 13-34 years of residence were more proactive to engage in various e-health activities. Our study informs the practice aiming to enhance U.S. immigrants' Internet use for better health-related outcomes. C1 [Zhao, Xinyan] Hong Kong Baptist Univ, Dept Commun Studies, 906 CVA Bldg,5 Hereford Rd, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Yang, Bo] Georgia State Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Tobacco Ctr Regulatory Sci, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA. [Wong, Chau-Wai] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Elect & Comp Engn, Raleigh, NC USA. C3 Hong Kong Baptist University; University System of Georgia; Georgia State University; North Carolina State University RP Zhao, XY (corresponding author), Hong Kong Baptist Univ, Dept Commun Studies, 906 CVA Bldg,5 Hereford Rd, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. 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PD SEP 19 PY 2019 VL 34 IS 11 BP 1259 EP 1269 DI 10.1080/10410236.2018.1475999 PG 11 WC Communication; Health Policy & Services WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Health Care Sciences & Services GA IT6GY UT WOS:000482970300004 PM 29768069 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Wilczewski, M Gorbaniuk, O Giuri, P AF Wilczewski, Michal Gorbaniuk, Oleg Giuri, Paola TI The Psychological and Academic Effects of Studying From the Home and Host Country During the COVID-19 Pandemic SO FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE COVID-19; quarantine; international students (foreign students); online learning; satisfaction; academic adjustment; acculturative stress; loneliness ID ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; MEDICAL-STUDENTS; SOCIAL SUPPORT; OUTBREAK; PERCEPTIONS; PERSONALITY; ADOLESCENTS; ADJUSTMENT; ROLES AB Objective: This study explored the psychological and academic effects of studying online from the home vis-a-vis host country during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in the experience of international students at the University of Warsaw, Poland. Methods: A total of 357 international students from 62 countries (236 in the host country and 121 in the home country) completed an online questionnaire survey 2 months after transition to online learning. We studied students' levels of loneliness, life and academic satisfaction, acculturative stress, academic adjustment, performance, loyalty, and perceptions of the online learning experience. Results: The country-of-residence variable had no statistically significant effects on most psychological and academic variables. Significant effects were observed only for two academic variables. Specifically, students who returned to the home country found online communication with other students more contributing to their online learning experience and exhibited higher academic adjustment than students who remained in the host country. This suggests the positive influence of (peer and familial) support on online learning experience from the home country. Furthermore, a significant difference in experiencing acculturative stress occurred for students in quarantine/self-isolation in the host country, which expands prior literature on the disruptive effects of social distancing on students' mental health. Finally, this study confirmed the expected increased levels of loneliness among self-isolating students in both countries, hence extending prior results to the home- and host-country contexts. No relationship between self-isolation and students' life or academic satisfaction was found, which is explained by the specific nature of the learning-from-home experience. C1 [Wilczewski, Michal] Univ Warsaw, Fac Appl Linguist, Inst Specialised & Intercultural Commun, Warsaw, Poland. [Wilczewski, Michal; Giuri, Paola] Univ Bologna, Dept Management, Bologna, Italy. [Gorbaniuk, Oleg] John Paul II Catholic Univ Lublin, Inst Psychol, Fac Social Sci, Lublin, Poland. [Gorbaniuk, Oleg] Univ Econ & Human Sci Warsaw, Fac Psychol, Warsaw, Poland. C3 University of Warsaw; University of Bologna; Catholic University of Lublin RP Wilczewski, M (corresponding author), Univ Warsaw, Fac Appl Linguist, Inst Specialised & Intercultural Commun, Warsaw, Poland.; Wilczewski, M (corresponding author), Univ Bologna, Dept Management, Bologna, Italy. EM mwilczewski@uw.edu.pl RI Wilczewski, Michal/AAD-7832-2022; Wilczewski, Michal/A-2522-2015 OI Wilczewski, Michal/0000-0001-7650-5759 FU Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange within the Bekker Programme [PPN/BEK/2019/1/00448/U/00001] FX This research was supported by the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange within the Bekker Programme (PPN/BEK/2019/1/00448/U/00001) toMW. 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Psychol. PD APR 9 PY 2021 VL 12 AR 644096 DI 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.644096 PG 8 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA RQ4VU UT WOS:000642418000001 PM 33897547 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Bjarnadottir, RI Millery, M Fleck, E Bakken, S AF Bjarnadottir, R. I. Millery, M. Fleck, E. Bakken, S. TI Correlates of online health information-seeking behaviors in a low-income Hispanic community SO INFORMATICS FOR HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE LA English DT Article DE Health behavior; health information seeking; Hispanic Americans; Internet ID INTERNET ACCESS; ACCULTURATION; IMMIGRANTS AB Objective: The purpose of this study was to explore the correlates of online health information-seeking behaviors among Hispanic residents of a low-income urban neighborhood. Methods: Data were collected with a community survey from 1045 unique participants at ambulatory care clinics in a largely Hispanic immigrant community in northern Manhattan, New York. A descriptive correlational analysis was conducted using logistic regression. Results: A majority of the participants were born outside the United States (85.7%), and half (50.3%) had completed high school. A logistic regression revealed that five independent variables were significantly correlated with online health information-seeking behaviors: age, education, marital status, primary language, and health literacy. Age and Spanish as preferred language were negatively associated with online health information-seeking (OR = 0.93 and 0.50), whereas education and health literacy were positively associated with online health information-seeking (OR = 4.28 and 1.28). Conclusions: The findings have implications for designing online health information resources and interventions appropriate for the populations they are likely to reach. Furthermore, the findings highlight the need for special efforts to ensure access to reliable health information for immigrant populations and those with low health literacy. C1 [Bjarnadottir, R. I.; Bakken, S.] Columbia Univ, Sch Nursing, Mail Code 6,630 West 168th St,Room 238, New York, NY 10032 USA. [Millery, M.] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, New York, NY USA. [Fleck, E.] Columbia Univ, Coll Phys & Surg, New York, NY USA. [Millery, M.; Bakken, S.] Columbia Univ, Dept Biomed Informat, New York, NY USA. C3 Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University RP Bjarnadottir, RI (corresponding author), Columbia Univ, Sch Nursing, Mail Code 6,630 West 168th St,Room 238, New York, NY 10032 USA. EM rb2898@cumc.columbia.edu OI I. Bjarnadottir, Ragnhildur/0000-0001-6325-1200 FU Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) [R01HS019853]; NYS Department of Economic Development NYSTAR [C090157] FX This study was part of Washington Heights/Inwood Informatics Infrastructure for Community-Centered Comparative Effectiveness Research (WICER), and generously funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) (R01HS019853) and the NYS Department of Economic Development NYSTAR (C090157). 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In video gaming, women have come to represent nearly half of the market; yet, this is a limited indicator of gender-based progress. A culture of masculine dominance persists. Extending previous research on boundary work, the authors employ a cultural perspective of tokenism to examine how gendered boundaries in consumption subcultures persist despite efforts to transform or even eradicate them. This qualitative study draws on interviews with 23 gamers who identify as women (ages 19-29 years), coupled with data from social media platforms, news media, and industry reports. Empirical findings capture the recursive process of maladaptive boundary crossing: how women's efforts to subvert gendered boundaries at the micro level (e.g., through response enactments) get churned through the structuring tokenistic mechanics of boundary work at the meso level and result in the inadvertent cultural persistence of masculine dominance. The analysis offers a conceptual framework that explains how micro-meso level dynamics perpetuate and conceal inequity in consumption subcultures. Implications address the precarious promise of progress and the cultural legacy of tokenism in the marketplace with particular relevance to broader systems of domination. C1 [Drenten, Jenna] Loyola Univ Chicago, Mkt, Quinlan Sch Business, Chicago, IL 60611 USA. [Harrison, Robert L.] Western Michigan Univ, Haworth Coll Business, Kalamazoo, MI 49008 USA. C3 Loyola University Chicago; Western Michigan University RP Drenten, J (corresponding author), Loyola Univ Chicago, Mkt, Quinlan Sch Business, Chicago, IL 60611 USA. 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Consum. Res. PD MAY 15 PY 2023 VL 50 IS 1 BP 2 EP 24 DI 10.1093/jcr/ucac046 EA OCT 2022 PG 23 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA G4RS6 UT WOS:000881798900001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Li, C Liu, JM AF Li, Cong Liu, Jiangmeng TI Effects of using social networking sites in different languages: Does Spanish or English make a difference? SO COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE Social media; Social networking sites; SNS; Media dependency system; Hispanic culture ID MEDIA-SYSTEM DEPENDENCY; HISPANIC CONSUMERS; SHOPPING BEHAVIOR; UNITED-STATES; ACCULTURATION; FACEBOOK; AMERICAN; IMMIGRANTS; ETHNICITY; CULTURE AB Although a large volume of research on social networking sites (SNS) and their effects has been accumulated in the literature over the past few years, empirical studies examining how people use SNS in languages other than English are somewhat limited. Particularly, the use of Spanish SNS has rarely been investigated. To shed light on this research direction, the current study compared the effects of using Spanish and English SNS on individuals' cultural orientations and attitude formation. A total of 113 adult consumers participated in a laboratory experiment where they were asked to evaluate either of two experimental websites, one with Hispanic cultural connotations and the other with American cultural meanings. Their SNS usage and cultural orientations were measured. It was found that more frequent usage of Spanish SNS was significantly associated with a higher level of Hispanic cultural orientation and a more favorable attitude toward the website with American cultural meanings. However, the use of English SNS did not significantly influence people's American cultural orientations and their website evaluations. Usage of both Spanish and English SNS was found to be motivated by individuals' social play dependency on such media platforms. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. C1 [Li, Cong] Univ Miami, Sch Commun, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA. [Liu, Jiangmeng] Seattle Univ, Dept Commun, Seattle, WA 98122 USA. C3 University of Miami; Seattle University RP Li, C (corresponding author), Univ Miami, Sch Commun, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA. 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PD SEP PY 2017 VL 74 BP 257 EP 264 DI 10.1016/j.chb.2017.04.031 PG 8 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Psychology, Experimental WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA EY3IF UT WOS:000403864100027 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Washington, TA Patel, SN Meyer-Adams, N AF Washington, Thomas A. Patel, Shivan N. Meyer-Adams, Nancy TI Drinking Patterns and HIV Risk Behaviors Among Black and Latino Men Who Have Sex Within Los Angeles County SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MENS HEALTH LA English DT Article DE men of color; sexual health; gay health issues; alcohol use; risk behaviors ID ALCOHOL-CONSUMPTION PATTERNS; SUBSTANCE USE; YOUNG MEN; UNITED-STATES; AGE; ACCULTURATION; MORTALITY; LEVEL; GAY; MSM AB Alcohol, the most widely used substance among men who have sex with men (85%), remains an important factor in HIV research among this high-risk population. However, research on alcohol use among Black and Latino men who have sex with men (BLMSM), a population disproportionately affected by HIV in the United States, is limited and inconclusive. This study explored sociodemographic and HIV risk with daily heavy and low-risk drinking patterns among BLMSM. BLMSM (N = 188) aged 18 to 40 years were recruited through social media, local colleges, heteronormative clubs, private men's groups, gay establishments, and organized events in Los Angeles County. Participants completed self-administered questionnaires. Fisher's exact tests revealed significant relationships between drinking patterns and condomless insertive anal intercourse (p = .001), race (p < .001), age (p = .02), and perception of alcohol-related HIV risk (p = .007). The Fisher's exact tests findings for age held true in the multiple regression model (p = .014). Findings suggest that BLMSM who engage in higher risk drinking also engage in alcohol-related HIV risk. Culturally competent interventions should consider including a combined focus to explore the synergy between risky drinking patterns and HIV risk among BLMSM. C1 [Washington, Thomas A.; Patel, Shivan N.; Meyer-Adams, Nancy] Calif State Univ Long Beach, Long Beach, CA 90840 USA. C3 California State University System; California State University Long Beach RP Patel, SN (corresponding author), Calif State Univ Long Beach, Dept Social Work, 1250 Bellflower Blvd SPA 224, Long Beach, CA 90840 USA. EM shivanp12@gmail.com FU National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health [1R21DA033874-01A1]; National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities of the National Institutes of Health [P20MD003942] FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse under Award Number 1R21DA033874-01A1 and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities under Award Number P20MD003942, both of the National Institutes of Health. 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J. Mens Health PD JUL PY 2017 VL 11 IS 4 BP 834 EP 844 DI 10.1177/1557988315605894 PG 11 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA EY3VD UT WOS:000403901600005 PM 26400715 OA Green Accepted, Green Published, hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU McKenzie, J AF McKenzie, Jessica TI Digital Media as Sites for Cultural Identity Development: The Case of Hmong American Emerging Adults SO JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT RESEARCH LA English DT Article; Early Access DE digital media; cultural identity; Hmong Americans; emerging adults; qualitative methods ID ETHNIC-IDENTITY; ACCULTURATION SCALE; MENTAL-HEALTH; ADOLESCENTS; INTEGRATION; LANGUAGE; THINKING AB Although academic and popular interest in how digital media affect youth has exploded in recent years, research rarely addresses the roles of culture and cultural identity in youth digital media use. Especially conspicuous is the inattention to Asian Americans-the fastest growing racial or ethnic group in the United States. This study explores how 17 Hmong American emerging adults' (M-age = 21.94 years) digital media use shapes, and is shaped by, their cultural identity development. To construct a nuanced portrait, this study draws from multiple data sources: (a) participant framings of their digital media use in relation to their cultural identity during in-depth interviews, (b) the type of cultural content that a selection of participants posted on their social media profiles, and (c) participants' ethnic identity scores (included to contextualize qualitative results). Inductive thematic analysis revealed that participants use digital media to explore and express their cultural identities, and to escape and reshape Hmong values. Results further revealed that participants' digital media use elicits awareness of-and for some, assists in reconciling-tensions between Hmong and American values. Altogether, findings highlight the complex role of digital media in the cultural identity development of Hmong American youth. C1 [McKenzie, Jessica] Calif State Univ Fresno, Child & Family Sci, Fresno, CA 93740 USA. C3 California State University System; California State University Fresno RP McKenzie, J (corresponding author), Calif State Univ Fresno, 5300 North Campus Dr,M-S FF12, Fresno, CA 93740 USA. 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Adolesc. Res. PD 2022 AUG 23 PY 2022 DI 10.1177/07435584221116312 EA AUG 2022 PG 35 WC Psychology, Developmental WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 3Y5YD UT WOS:000843799900001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Unlu, B Riper, H van Straten, A Cuijpers, P AF Unlu, Burcin Riper, Heleen van Straten, Annemieke Cuijpers, Pim TI Guided self-help on the internet for turkish migrants with depression: the design of a randomized controlled trial SO TRIALS LA English DT Article ID COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY; SCALE CES-D; HOSPITAL ANXIETY; CRITERION VALIDITY; DUTCH; INTERVENTIONS; VALIDATION; DISORDERS; INTERVIEW; SYMPTOMS AB Background: The Turkish population living in the Netherlands has a high prevalence of psychological complaints and has a high threshold for seeking professional help for these problems. Seeking help through the Internet can overcome these barriers. This project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a guided self-help problem-solving intervention for depressed Turkish migrants that is culturally adapted and web-based. Methods: This study is a randomized controlled trial with two arms: an experimental condition group and a wait list control group. The experimental condition obtains direct access to the guided web-based self-help intervention, which is based on Problem Solving Treatment (PST) and takes 6 weeks to complete. Turkish adults with mild to moderate depressive symptoms will be recruited from the general population and the participants can choose between a Turkish and a Dutch version. The primary outcome measure is the reduction of depressive symptoms, the secondary outcome measures are somatic symptoms, anxiety, acculturation, quality of life and satisfaction. Participants are assessed at baseline, post-test (6 weeks), and 4 months after baseline. Analysis will be conducted on the intention-to-treat sample. Discussion: This study evaluates the effectiveness of a guided problem-solving intervention for Turkish adults living in the Netherlands that is culturally adapted and web-based. C1 [Unlu, Burcin; Riper, Heleen; van Straten, Annemieke; Cuijpers, Pim] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Clin Physiol, NL-1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Unlu, Burcin; Riper, Heleen] Netherlands Inst Mental Hlth & Addict, Trimbos Inst, Innovat Ctr Mental Hlth & Technol ICOM, NL-3500 AS Utrecht, Netherlands. C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Trimbos Institute RP Unlu, B (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Clin Physiol, Van der Boechorstr 1, NL-1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands. 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Japan explained the main mission of this program as facilitating and serving human life through technology and contributing to a comfortable and long life. This announcement discussed the organic bond between Industry 4.0 and Society 5.0; the goals of Society 5.0; the aspects affecting, changing, and transforming individuals and society within this framework; the new relationship networks and cultural elements; and their impact on values and meaning, individualization, and objectification of the individual. Since the inception of the idea of panopticon, the control, inspection, and surveillance of public and social order have been treated as a culturally romantic and engineering critique of technology In the connection of the power-individual relationship. 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PY 2021 IS 64 BP 337 EP 355 DI 10.26650/JECS2020-851620 PG 19 WC Sociology WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Sociology GA YI9NJ UT WOS:000744167400010 OA Green Submitted, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Larson, JF Park, J AF Larson, James F. Park, Jaemin TI From developmental to network state: Government restructuring and ICT-led innovation in Korea SO TELECOMMUNICATIONS POLICY LA English DT Article DE Restructuring; Innovation; Governance; Developmental state; ICT4D; Digital convergence; Chaebol AB This study examines the government leadership and strategic restructuring that guided The Republic of Korea's remarkable ICT-led development from 1980 to the present. That time span coincided with tumultuous political, social and economic transformation inside Korea including the growth of such powerful chaebol industry groups as Samsung, LG and SK. Globally, the period covered by this study featured the growth of new and more powerful digital networks epitomized by the internet. It also marked South Korea's transition from a development to a network state, allowing assessment of what the experience implies for developmental state theory. This research shows that the most convincing explanation for the decline of the Korean developmental state lies in its transformation into a network state. Nevertheless, it illustrates the continuing explanatory power of key concepts from the developmental state model, including a competent bureaucracy, a political system that allows the bureaucracy sufficient autonomy, market conforming methods for state intervention, and a "control tower," to guide industrial policy in the networked era. Korea's success suggests the value of technically trained leaders in the ICT sector, and in sharp contrast with Japan, the importance of the cross cultural experience and global outlook that many of them gained while studying at top universities in the U.S. For most of the three-plus decades in this study, the MIC served as Korea's control tower for the ICT sector, guiding policy and technology projects, and culminating in the 2006 U-Korea Master Plan, an ambitious blueprint for becoming the world's first ubiquitously networked nation. However, only two years later the Lee Myung-bak administration dismantled the ICT control tower in favor of a five year experiment with a liberal, market oriented approach to the ICT sector, much like policy in the United States. It was widely considered a failure and in 2013 President Park Geun-hye restored the control tower function within the new "super" Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning. The Korea experience also has more general implications for policymakers in the information age. These include the need for national, long-term policies, the vital role of education, ranging from highly specialized R&D to broadly-based public-private sector efforts to ensure demand for services. While Korea's past success depended heavily on the manufacture and export of hardware and infrastructure, the President Park Geun-hye administration, with its emphasis on building a "creative economy" signaled recognition that software, content and services will be more important than hardware in the future. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. C1 [Larson, James F.] KAIST Grad Sch Sci & Technol Policy, Taejon 305701, South Korea. [Park, Jaemin] Konkuk Univ, Coll Business Adm, Dept Management Technol, Seoul 143701, South Korea. C3 Konkuk University RP Larson, JF (corresponding author), KAIST Grad Sch Sci & Technol Policy, 291 Daehak Ro, Taejon 305701, South Korea. EM jamesflarson@kaist.ac.kr; jpark@konkuk.ac.kr OI Larson, James F./0000-0001-5673-5346; Park, Jaemin/0000-0003-3561-0792 CR [Anonymous], WASHINGTON POST [Anonymous], 2013, KANKYOREH NEWS 0303 [Anonymous], 2011, SEOUL SHINMUN 0310 [Anonymous], 2009, FINANCIAL NEWS 0503 [Anonymous], 2007, KOREA KNOWLEDGE EC E [Anonymous], 1982, MITI JAPANESE MIRACL [Anonymous], 2015, FINANCIAL NEWS [Anonymous], 2008, MAEIL KYONGJAE 0801 [Anonymous], 2008, KOREA EC DAILY 1022 [Anonymous], 2010, POWER IDENTITY [Anonymous], 1999, DEV STATE [Anonymous], 2009, KOREA TIMES [Anonymous], 2008, E DAILY 1207 Benkler Y., 2006, WEALTH NETWORKS SOIC Biggs P. E., 2012, GLOBAL INFORM TECHNO Castells Manuel, 2010, NASCITA SOCIETA RETE Chang H. J., 2000, M OTH CAN GROUP VEN Cowhey PF, 2009, TRANSFORMING GLOBAL INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION MARKETS: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INNOVATION, P1 Hanna N. K., 2003, WHY NATL STRATEGIES Hong D. P., 2005, HANGZH CHIN WORKSH T Hong SG, 1998, TELECOMMUN POLICY, V22, P697, DOI 10.1016/S0308-5961(98)00049-4 Jenkins H., 2008, CONVERGENCE CULTURE Jeon CY, 2010, TECHNOL CULT, V51, P55 Jho WS, 2007, GOVERNANCE, V20, P633, DOI 10.1111/j.1468-0491.2007.00375.x Jin D. Y., 2006, TELECOMMUNICATIONS P, V30, P3 Johnson C., 1986, MITI MPT TELECOM WAR Kelly T., 2003, BROADBAND KOREA INTE Kim SY, 2013, GLOB POLICY, V4, P184, DOI 10.1111/1758-5899.12052 Kim SY, 2012, REV INT POLIT ECON, V19, P140, DOI 10.1080/09692290.2010.503125 Kushida K., 2006, UNDERSTANDING S KORE Kyong S. H., 2013, COMMUNICATION Larson J.F, 1995, TELECOMMUNICATIONS R Lee K.S., 2012, IT DEV KOREA BROADBA Ministry of Government Legislation, 2008, LAWS GOV ORG RESTR G Moon C. I., 1988, STATE DEV Noam E, 2011, FINANCIAL TIMES Nye J., 2010, FUTURE AM POWER DOMI OECD, 2007, BROADB EC Oh M, 2011, ROUTL ADV KOREAN STU, P1 Oh M., HIST 1980S TEL UNPUB Onodera O., 2008, CASE STUDY 5 TRADE I Pool I. D. S., 1983, TECHNOLOGIES FREEDOM Schuller M., 2012, KOREAN SCI TECHNOLOG Ser M. J., 2013, KOREA JOONGANG 0228 Song H. J., 2012, ICT DEV I BUILDING Uttam Jitendra., 2012, KOREAN SCI TECHNOLOG Vogel S. K., 2013, 3 GLOBALIZATION CAN Wikipedia, METC LAW Wilson E.J., 2006, INFORM REVOLUTION DE World Economic Forum, 2012, RISK RESP HYP WORLD NR 50 TC 32 Z9 32 U1 4 U2 125 PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD PI OXFORD PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND SN 0308-5961 EI 1879-3258 J9 TELECOMMUN POLICY JI Telecommun. Policy PD MAY PY 2014 VL 38 IS 4 BP 344 EP 359 DI 10.1016/j.telpol.2013.10.001 PG 16 WC Communication; Information Science & Library Science; Telecommunications WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Information Science & Library Science; Telecommunications GA AG4YF UT WOS:000335425600002 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Liu, GX Li, WT Zhang, YS AF Liu, Guangxiang Li, Wentao Zhang, Yueshan TI Tracing Chinese international students' psychological and academic adjustments in uncertain times: An exploratory case study in the United Kingdom SO FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE psychological adjustment; academic adjustment; Chinese international students; higher education in the United Kingdom; COVID-19; qualitative case studies ID POSTGRADUATE STUDENTS; HIGHER-EDUCATION; ADAPTATION; ACCULTURATION; EXPERIENCES; PATTERNS; COVID-19 AB The worldwide spread of COVID-19 has exerted tremendous influences on the wellbeing of international students and the sustainable development of higher education. The current study adopts an 8-month exploratory case study to trace eight Chinese international students' psychological and academic adjustments in the United Kingdom amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Emerging from the qualitative data constitutive of semi-structured interviews, self-reflection writings, memoing, together with stimulated-recall interviews, findings have demonstrated the three main types of obstruction for such students' adjustments in the foreign land including COVID-specific challenges (i.e., the threat of infect, reduced access to university facilities and resources); COVID-enhanced challenges (i.e., anxiety exacerbated by parents and social media use, anti-Asian racism and hate incidents); and language barriers and cultural differences as long-standing issues. Students' previous lockdown experience, individual resilience, development of monocultural friendship patterns, and institutional provision and support are all factors that have contributed to their ability to overcome or at least mitigate the psychological and academic difficulties. The study offers insight into the impacts of COVID-19 on international students, providing implications that could contribute to the sustainable adjustments of international students in times of disruptive events and inform future responses to global health crises from individual and higher education perspectives. C1 [Liu, Guangxiang] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Dept English, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Li, Wentao] Univ British Columbia, Dept Language & Literacy Educ, Vancouver, BC, Canada. [Zhang, Yueshan] Univ Hong Kong, Sch English, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. C3 Chinese University of Hong Kong; University of British Columbia; University of Hong Kong RP Liu, GX (corresponding author), Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Dept English, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. 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Psychol. PD SEP 20 PY 2022 VL 13 AR 942227 DI 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.942227 PG 15 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 5B7OE UT WOS:000863759400001 PM 36204745 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Han, LT Ma, YH Addo, PC Liao, MY Fang, JM AF Han, Lintong Ma, Yuehuan Addo, Prince Clement Liao, Miyan Fang, Jiaming TI The Role of Platform Quality on Consumer Purchase Intention in the Context of Cross-Border E-Commerce: The Evidence from Africa SO BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES LA English DT Article DE cross-border e-commerce; information system success model; acculturation; African consumer ID WORD-OF-MOUTH; INFORMATION-SYSTEMS SUCCESS; PERCEIVED VALUE; SERVICE QUALITY; ELECTRONIC COMMERCE; SAUDI-ARABIA; SOCIAL MEDIA; MCLEAN MODEL; TRUST; SATISFACTION AB Africa, as one of the rapidly growing markets, presents a significant opportunity for cross-border e-commerce companies to penetrate their consumer market, which is in dire need of development. This study utilizes the Information System Success model to investigate the impact of cross-border e-commerce platform quality on consumers' purchase intentions. Additionally, the study identifies the role of perceived value and trust in the purchase process. Moreover, the moderating effect of consumer acculturation on the relationship between cross-border platform quality and perceived value is examined. A total of 446 valid responses were obtained through a questionnaire survey and analyzed using structural equations. The findings reveal that platform information quality, system quality, and service quality significantly enhance consumers' perceived value, thereby positively influencing their purchase intention. Furthermore, the results highlight the joint effect of perceived value and trust on purchase intention, and trust plays a mediating role in this relationship. The moderating effect of acculturation is also confirmed, indicating that it negatively moderates the impact of system and information quality on perceived value, while positively moderating the impact of service quality on perceived value. These findings complement and extend existing cross-border e-commerce research and provide valuable insights into the buying behavior of African consumers. C1 [Han, Lintong; Ma, Yuehuan; Liao, Miyan; Fang, Jiaming] Univ Elect Sci & Technol China, Sch Management & Econ, 2006,Xiyuan Ave,West Hi Tech Zone, Chengdu 611731, Peoples R China. [Addo, Prince Clement] Akenten Appiah Menka Univ Skills Training & Entrep, Fac Appl Sci & Math Educ, POB 1277, Kumasi 03220, Ghana. C3 University of Electronic Science & Technology of China RP Fang, JM (corresponding author), Univ Elect Sci & Technol China, Sch Management & Econ, 2006,Xiyuan Ave,West Hi Tech Zone, Chengdu 611731, Peoples R China. EM jmfang@uestc.edu.cn OI Fang, Jiaming/0000-0002-1806-8017 FU Centre for West African Studies of University of Electronic Science and Technology of China [CWAS2022060601] FX This research was funded by Centre for West African Studies of University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, grant number CWAS2022060601. 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PD MAY 6 PY 2023 VL 13 IS 5 AR 385 DI 10.3390/bs13050385 PG 17 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA H2NQ6 UT WOS:000994389200001 PM 37232622 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lian, Z Wallace, BC Fullilove, RE AF Lian, Zi Wallace, Barbara C. Fullilove, Robert E. TI Mental Health Help-Seeking Intentions Among Chinese International Students in the US Higher Education System: The Role of Coping Self-Efficacy, Social Support, and Stigma for Seeking Psychological Help SO ASIAN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Chinese international students; mental health; help-seeking intentions; stigma; coping strategies ID UNITED-STATES; SERVICE USE; COUNSELING-SERVICES; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; DISORDERS; STRESS; ACCULTURATION; PREVALENCE; CULTURE; ILLNESS AB This study investigated the mental health help-seeking intentions and its correlates among Chinese international students in the U.S. higher education system. An analytic cross-sectional study was conducted. Recruitment of participants occurred via a social media campaign, and participants were invited to complete an online anonymous survey. A total of 222 Chinese international students participated in the study. The majority of the participants were female (65.3%), graduate students (84.7%), and the only child in the family (83.8%). The participants had a mean age of 23.75 years old. When encountering mental health-related problems, participants reported the highest help-seeking intentions for an intimate partner, parent, and friend. A higher level of general mental health help-seeking intentions was associated with a higher level of coping self-efficacy, a higher level of social support, a lower level of stigma, being undergraduate students, and having no history of full-time employment. These findings indicated the preferred sources for mental health help seeking and the need to improve the general mental health help seeking among Chinese international students. Culturally tailored programs are needed that take into consideration Chinese cultural attitudes and beliefs with regard to mental and emotional symptoms of distress. C1 [Lian, Zi; Wallace, Barbara C.] Columbia Univ, New York, NY 10027 USA. [Fullilove, Robert E.] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, New York, NY 10027 USA. [Lian, Zi; Wallace, Barbara C.] Columbia Univ Teachers Coll, Ctr Hlth Equ & Urban Sci Educ, 525 West 120th St, New York, NY 10027 USA. C3 Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University Teachers College RP Lian, Z (corresponding author), Columbia Univ Teachers Coll, Ctr Hlth Equ & Urban Sci Educ, 525 West 120th St, New York, NY 10027 USA. 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McCoy, Scott Polak, Peter BE Galletta, D Zhang, P TI UNDERSTANDING THE DIRECT AND INTERACTION EFFECTS OF WEB DELAY AND RELATED FACTORS A Research Program SO HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION AND MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS: APPLICATIONS SE Advances in Management Information Systems LA English DT Article; Book Chapter DE Electronic Commerce; Response Time; Web Site Design; Web Delay; Attitudes; Performance; Intentions; Cross-Cultural Research ID SYSTEM RESPONSE-TIME; INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; PERSONAL CONTROL; USER ACCEPTANCE; SERVICE; SATISFACTION; ATTRIBUTION; PERFORMANCE; STRESS; IMPACT AB The benefits of using the Internet are partially offset by one aspect of its usability: highly variable, intermittent, but frequent inter-page delay. For several years, the HCI literature has studied user reactions to long computer response time in clerical applications, but few studies have examined this problem in the domain of the Web. Examining the delay problem in a Web context is important, because the Web touches many more users, most of whom have little formal computer or task training. Hence, we have examined in our labs consequences of delay, along with factors that interact with delay. Some of our experiments have been published and some are still under review. Consequences of delay that we examined include user attitudes, behavior, and performance. Factors that we examined for possible interactions included site depth, familiarity with terminology used in organizing the site, variability of the delay, and feedback (continuous and gradual filling of the screen to make it obvious that the page is indeed loading). Experiment 1 (n = 196) provided seven levels of delay, ranging from zero to twelve seconds (in two-second increments), and discovered that ill effects began as delay exceeded two seconds. Experiment 2 (n = 206) again compared reactions to the same levels of delay, but this time with Mexican subjects. It was found that Mexicans were more patient than subjects in the United States. In both studies, the outcomes differed when comparing a familiar site with an unfamiliar site, suggesting that interactions should be examined more formally. Experiment 3 (n = 160) introduced two other factors from the HCI literature, and with a 2 x 2 x 2 ANOVA, we assessed the interactions between delay, site depth, and familiarity with the terminology in the site. As predicted, we found a significant three-way interaction. Consistent with more traditional literature, we also found strong direct effects. Experiment 4 (n = 152) employed another 2 x 2 x 2 design, but along with delay we analyzed the effects of variability and feedback as interacting variables. Analysis revealed that page-loading feedback is only important when there are long delays, and variability does not seem to be important in influencing attitudes, behavior, and performance of users. Conclusions from the four studies are that user impatience is high; that the results of delay can differ with culture; and that the variables that interact with delay are familiarity with site terminology, depth of the site, and feedback (in a slow site). Variability does not seem to interact with delay. C1 [Galletta, Dennis] Univ Pittsburgh, Katz Grad Sch Business, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA. [Henry, Raymond M.] Clemson Univ, Dept Management, Clemson, SC 29631 USA. [McCoy, Scott] Coll William & Mary, Mason Sch Business, Williamsburg, VA 23187 USA. [Polak, Peter] Univ Miami, Sch Business Adm, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA. C3 Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); University of Pittsburgh; Clemson University; William & Mary; University of Miami RP Galletta, D (corresponding author), Univ Pittsburgh, Katz Grad Sch Business, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA. 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Webster, Collin A. Mindrila, Diana Karp, Grace Goc Paul, David R. Orendorff, Karie Lee TI Association of Physical Educators' Socialization Experiences and Confidence with Respect to Comprehensive School Physical Activity Program Implementation SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH LA English DT Article DE whole of school physical activity; physical education; physical education teacher education; teacher socialization; role breadth self-efficacy ID SELF-EFFICACY; OCCUPATIONAL SOCIALIZATION; TEACHERS INTERPRETATION; LEARNING-EXPERIENCES; PRESERVICE TEACHERS; ACTIVITY LEADERSHIP; ACTIVITY PROMOTION; RECOMMENDATIONS; BELIEFS; HEALTH AB Comprehensive school physical activity programs (CSPAPs) are recommended to support physical education (PE) and increase the amount of physical activity (PA) youth receive each day. However, adoption of CSPAPs in the United States is low. PE teachers are well positioned to lead the implementation of CSPAPs, but research is needed to better understand (a) PE teachers' confidence to assume the multiple roles involved with CSPAP implementation and (b) the factors that are associated with such confidence. This study examined PE teachers' role breadth self-efficacy (RBSE) as a measure of PE teachers' CSPAP-related confidence and its association with seminal life experiences as framed within teacher socialization theory. A survey was emailed to a stratified-random sample of 2976 PE teachers and distributed on social media, garnering a total of 259 responses. Exploratory structural equation modeling supported a three-factor solution for teacher socialization variables (acculturation, professional socialization and organizational socialization), in line with the theoretical framework, and a single factor solution for RBSE. Professional socialization and organizational socialization were significant predictors of RBSE, and qualitative data from open-ended survey questions supported these relationships. The results highlight the importance of preservice teacher education and current employment contexts in PE teachers' CSPAP-related confidence. C1 [Merica, Christopher Barton] Univ North Carolina Wilmington, Sch Hlth & Appl Human Sci, Campus Box 5956, Wilmington, NC 28401 USA. [Egan, Cate A.; Karp, Grace Goc; Paul, David R.] Univ Idaho, Dept Movement Sci, 875 Perimeter Dr MS 2401, Moscow, ID 83844 USA. [Webster, Collin A.] Univ Birmingham Dubai, Sch Sport Exercise & Rehabil Sci, POB 341799, Dubai, U Arab Emirates. [Mindrila, Diana] Univ West Georgia, Dept Leadership Res & Sch Improvement, 1601 Maple St, Carrollton, GA 30118 USA. [Orendorff, Karie Lee] Montana State Univ, Dept Hlth & Human Dev, Culbertson Hall 100, Bozeman, MT 59717 USA. C3 University of North Carolina; University of North Carolina Wilmington; Idaho; University of Idaho; University System of Georgia; University of West Georgia; Montana State University System; Montana State University Bozeman RP Merica, CB (corresponding author), Univ North Carolina Wilmington, Sch Hlth & Appl Human Sci, Campus Box 5956, Wilmington, NC 28401 USA. 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J. Environ. Res. Public Health PD OCT PY 2022 VL 19 IS 19 AR 12005 DI 10.3390/ijerph191912005 PG 21 WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 5G2YH UT WOS:000866869100001 PM 36231304 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Cenek, J Komperova, A Smolik, J AF Cenek, Jiri Komperova, Aneta Smolik, Josef TI SELECTED ATTITUDES OF MUSLIMS TOWARD LIFE IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC IN THE CONTEXT OF THEIR FAITH SO POLITICKE VEDY LA English DT Article DE attitudes; Muslims; Islam; immigration; acculturation; religion ID ACCULTURATION; ASSIMILATION; IMMIGRATION; INTEGRATION; ADAPTATION; CULTURES; IDENTITY AB In the past several years, we could witness a massive mass and social media coverage of Muslims and their migration to Europe. This particular group is an object of stereotypical views and intensive emotional reactions. Despite that, Muslims living in Czech Republic are a relatively unknown and so far unexplored cultural group. Therefore, our study focused on selected faith-related attitudes toward Czech society investigated on a sample of Muslim immigrants living in Czech Republic for minimum of one year. We used a shortened and adjusted version of questionnaire previously used in WZB study (WZV, 2008) in three language mutations - Arabic, Czech, and English. The recruitment of participants was conducted via social networks; in total 143 responses were gathered. The data analysis is based primarily on descriptive statistics. The results show that there is a great variability in the strength of both the Muslim identity of the respondents and their religions believes. Their attitudes toward various topics related to Islam such as wearing headscarfs and other gender-related issues, teaching Islam in schools, or building Mosques also highly vary within the sample. Access to housing is perceived as the main source of discrimintation. Large-scale or longitudinal assessments of Muslim minority are needed to deepen our understanding of the attitudes of the Muslim minority in Czech Republic. We can assume that this topic will be investigated further in other Central European countries. C1 [Cenek, Jiri; Komperova, Aneta; Smolik, Josef] Mendel Univ Brno, Fac Reg Dev & Int Studies, Trida Gen Piky 2005-7, Brno 61300, Czech Republic. C3 Mendel University in Brno RP Cenek, J (corresponding author), Mendel Univ Brno, Fac Reg Dev & Int Studies, Trida Gen Piky 2005-7, Brno 61300, Czech Republic. EM jiri.cenek@mendelu.cz; anetakomperova@gmail.com; josef.smolik@mendelu.cz RI Smolík, Josef/E-2442-2018; Čeněk, Jiří/D-7919-2018 OI Smolík, Josef/0000-0001-5841-8598; Čeněk, Jiří/0000-0002-2543-5532 CR ABDEL-SAMAD H, 2016, ISLAMSKY FASISMUS Al-Fatlawi SH, 2016, J POLIT LAW, V9, P73, DOI 10.5539/jpl.v9n1p73 Alba R, 1997, INT MIGR REV, V31, P826, DOI 10.2307/2547416 [Anonymous], 2009, SOCIALNI INTEGRACE P [Anonymous], 2010, INTERKULTURNI PSYCHO [Anonymous], 2015, POLITIKA Banfi E, 2016, J ETHN MIGR STUD, V42, P292, DOI 10.1080/1369183X.2015.1102045 BECKA J. 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E. Iman, Esmeralda Campos, Leticia Perkins, Alexandra Liebman, Amy K. Miller, Mary E. Beaudet, Nancy J. Karr, Catherine J. TI Agricultural Occupational Health and Safety Perspectives Among Latino-American Youth SO Journal of Agromedicine LA English DT Article DE Latino-American; Agricultural workers; youth ID UNITED-STATES; INJURIES; PERCEPTIONS; FARMWORKERS; EMPLOYMENT; MIGRANT; HAZARDS; WORKERS; DEATHS AB Agricultural work is one of the most dangerous jobs for adolescents. Through a university-community partnership, the authors surveyed young primarily acculturated Latino-American farmworkers 14 to 18 years of age regarding their agricultural work experience. Topics included occupational health and safety education, work history, and information sources. The authors also evaluated the Rapid Clinical Assessment Tool (RCAT), a pictorial tool for identifying agricultural tasks to enhance discussion with clinical providers. One hundred forty youth with farmwork experience completed the survey; 6% reported a previous work-related injury or illness and 53% reported receiving some workplace health and safety training. Correct identification of legally restricted duties for youth varied but were generally low: participants identified working alone past 8 pm (57%), driving a forklift (56%), doing roofing work (39%), working in freezers (34%), and driving a delivery vehicle (30%). The Internet was identified as the most likely and reliable place youth would go to find information on workplace health and safety. Few (15%) reported clinician-initiated conversations on occupational health; however, a high proportion responded positively to questions regarding the usefulness of the RCAT for this purpose. This study highlights the need for workplace health and safety guidance for youth employed in agriculture. The results support Internet-based outreach and use of the RCAT to help facilitate occupational health discussions in clinical settings. C1 [Perla, M. E.; Perkins, Alexandra; Karr, Catherine J.] Univ Washington, Dept Environm & Occupat Hlth Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Perla, M. E.; Perkins, Alexandra; Beaudet, Nancy J.; Karr, Catherine J.] Univ Washington, Northwest Pediat Environm Hlth Specialty Unit, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Iman, Esmeralda; Campos, Leticia] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Liebman, Amy K.] Migrant Clinicians Network, Environm Occupat Hlth, Salisbury, MD USA. [Miller, Mary E.] Dept Labor & Ind, Tumwater, WA USA. [Karr, Catherine J.] Univ Washington, Dept Pediat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle RP Perla, ME (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Pediat Environm Hlth Specialty Unit, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. EM mperla@uw.edu RI Campos, Letícia/HIK-2898-2022 FU Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) [FAIN: U61TS000238] FX This work was supported by the cooperative agreement FAIN: U61TS000238 from the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). Its contents are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). 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Agromedicine PD APR 3 PY 2015 VL 20 IS 2 BP 167 EP 177 DI 10.1080/1059924X.2015.1010064 PG 11 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA CG7NT UT WOS:000353491300009 PM 25906275 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Boman, B AF Boman, Bjorn TI The Adaptive Proculturation Process of Being a Psychotherapist as a Kazakh Asylum Seeker in Sweden SO HUMAN ARENAS LA English DT Article; Early Access DE Proculturation; Psychotherapists; Asylum seeker ID ACCULTURATION; IMMIGRATION; PSYCHOLOGY; REFUGEES; QUALITY AB The term acculturation is important for describing and analyzing how for example migrants gradually become accustomed to a new host society. The term proculturation is similar but emphasizes the real-life experiences of migrants, as well as the fusion between familiar and unfamiliar ideas, things, and experiences. However, so far there is a dearth of studies which have aimed to explore such a construct empirically. The current article used a limited but meaningful example, the lived experiences of a Kazakh migrant in Sweden whose occupation is being a psychotherapist. The aim was to understand the cultural identity of this individual as regards processes of migration from A (Kazakhstan) to B (Sweden), as well as related proculturation processes. Moreover, the focus was also on the specific and precarious work conditions for a person who does not have the possibility to work officially as a psychotherapist during an extensive residence permit application process. Information derived from a semi-structured interview indicates that basic cultural identity markers (woman, Kazakh, Russian-speaking, Muslim) remained constant after residing in Sweden for more than 5 years but that some elements of the more secular-liberal Swedish culture (e.g., the Swedish language, increased alcohol consumption) were appropriated. The person used social media apps like WhatsApp as a technological tool to practice the profession as a psychotherapist in a transnational setting, which constitutes a different strategy than how Swedish as well as Kazakh psychotherapists generally perform this profession. C1 [Boman, Bjorn] Stockholm Univ, Dept Educ, Frescativagen 54, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden. C3 CIVIS; Stockholm University RP Boman, B (corresponding author), Stockholm Univ, Dept Educ, Frescativagen 54, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden. EM contact@bjornboman.com FU Stockholm University FX Open access funding provided by Stockholm University. 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Arenas PD 2022 JUN 1 PY 2022 DI 10.1007/s42087-022-00294-7 EA JUN 2022 PG 16 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Psychology GA 1T1UV UT WOS:000804523500001 OA hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Abd Khalil, A Saadan, N Liaw, JOH AF Abd Khalil, Adlina Saadan, Norlaila Liaw, Jessica Ong Hai TI Language Acculturation: Barriers to Social Distance & Psychological Distance for Malay Learners in Higher Learning Institutions SO AKADEMIKA LA English DT Article DE Language acculturation; Malay learners; Social distance; Psychological distance; Higher learning Institutions AB This study aims to see the challenges of social and psychological distance among Malay students to learn foreign languages. The self-interest and awareness of students is not the only factor to ponder an engagement in learning a foreign language. At the same time, social distance challenges will occur considering the culture of Malay students thought that foreign languages are not easy to learn and complicated. This study also aiming at the alternative taken by the students in order to improve their learning process in mastering a foreign language. The challenges facing by them is in the aspect of self-confidence, peers who can interact in Arabic and Japanese and facilities provided in the campus. Based on the study and observation, students in public universities receive more of these facilities than students in private universities. The main reason is that a reliable financial injection given by the Ministry of Higher Education will certainly be able to help the public universities in strengthening learning facilities for students. 20 respondents were interviewed and information been analyzed narratively through qualitative techniques. The results came up that the variations in background, which is not from the community group that uses the language is also a challenge for them. As an alternative, students can double practice of communicating with foreign students who using both languages most of the times, as well as the role of social media that displays the story of society and by using it in the plot of the story. C1 [Abd Khalil, Adlina; Saadan, Norlaila] Univ Islam Antarabangsa Sultan Abdul Halim Muadza, Bangi, Malaysia. [Liaw, Jessica Ong Hai] Natl Def Univ Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. C3 Universiti Pertahanan Nasional Malaysia RP Abd Khalil, A (corresponding author), Univ Islam Antarabangsa Sultan Abdul Halim Muadza, Bangi, Malaysia. 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PY 2021 VL 91 IS 3 SI SI BP 109 EP 117 DI 10.17576/akad-2021-91IK-10 PG 9 WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Social Sciences - Other Topics GA YO4IV UT WOS:000747905900010 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Gerpott, TJ Bicak, I AF Gerpott, Torsten J. Bicak, Ilknur TI Telecommunication service choice and use among migrants: The case of German-Turkish consumers SO COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE Migrant consumers; Ethnic marketing; Telecommunication use behavior; Product attribute evaluation; Strength of national identification; Mobile communication services and devices; Turks in Germany ID ETHNIC-IDENTITY; SOCIAL MEDIA; ACCULTURATION; USAGE; IMMIGRANTS; IDENTIFICATION; ADOLESCENTS; CONSUMPTION; LOYALTY AB The present article proposes to extend popular psychological frameworks explaining consumer responses to telecommunication device and service offerings by determinants which are geared towards buyers with a migration background. Such potential factors are the strength of identification of migrants with their country of origin (COO) and their country of residence (COR). This general notion is substantiated for German-Turks by analyzing relationships between their strength of COO and COR identifications and the assessment of the purchase relevance of two attributes of mobile communication device and contract offerings as well as the use intensity of three telecommunication services. In a sample of 291 German-Turks, the migrants' strength of identification with Turkey and Germany, respectively each have a significant separate main and a joint interaction effect on the relevance subjects attribute to brand aspects in mobile service and phone contract buying decisions. The impact of each of the two national identification dimensions on felt buying relevance of price-value attributes of mobile communication offerings is also statistically significant, but materially less important. COO and COR identifications emerge with significantly positive prediction weights in capturing variance in the extent to which German-Turks use innovative supplementary mobile data services. The findings have implications for marketing mobile devices, voice calling and mobile data services to migrant consumers. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. C1 [Gerpott, Torsten J.; Bicak, Ilknur] Univ Duisburg Essen, Mercator Sch Management, Lotharstr 65, D-47057 Duisburg, Germany. C3 University of Duisburg Essen RP Gerpott, TJ (corresponding author), Univ Duisburg Essen, Mercator Sch Management, Lotharstr 65, D-47057 Duisburg, Germany. 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Cappellini, Benedetta Wang, Cheng Lu TI From West to East: British sojourners' acculturation in China SO INTERNATIONAL MARKETING REVIEW LA English DT Article DE Acculturation; Food consumption; British value; Chinese value; Media consumption; Sojourner ID CONSUMER ACCULTURATION; SCALE DEVELOPMENT; CONSUMPTION; IDENTITY; CULTURE; MEDIA; FOOD; SEPARATENESS; TRAVEL AB Purpose The previous literature has often focussed on Asian migrants' acculturation to western cultures with data collected in the western contexts. The purpose of this paper is to explore western consumers' acculturation to East Asian cultures and their consumption behaviour, which fulfils the research scarcity in this area. Design/methodology/approach This study was conducted via carrying out in-depth interviews with 18 British sojourners in China, exploring how they acculturated to Chinese culture, with a particular focus on their food and media consumption choices. This study applied inductive qualitative data analysis to build on but explore beyond existing theory. Findings The findings show that British consumers display a diversified acculturation strategy towards different products. They present an integrative approach to food consumption with a negotiable identity to host culture value whilst they adopt a separated approach relating to traditional media consumption, showing a non-negotiable consumption stance. They apply an assimilated approach for pragmatic reasons in terms of social media adoption. Originality/value British sojourners in China hold a different cultural stance in different areas of consumption. The study contributes to existing theory by arguing the complexity of a continuous negotiation process between different value systems in sojourning consumers' consumption choices, which existing acculturation models have not yet examined. By emphasising the context speciality, the findings give marketers clear marketing implications when targeting sojourning consumers who declare their value stance via consumption practice. C1 [Yu, Qionglei] Univ Kent, Kent Business Sch, Canterbury, Kent, England. [Yen, Dorothy A.] Brunel Univ, London, England. [Cappellini, Benedetta] Univ London, Royal Holloway, London, England. [Wang, Cheng Lu] Univ New Haven, Dept Mkt & Quantitat Anal, West Haven, CT USA. C3 University of Kent; Brunel University; University of London; Royal Holloway University London; University New Haven RP Yu, QL (corresponding author), Univ Kent, Kent Business Sch, Canterbury, Kent, England. 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Market. Rev. PD JUL 22 PY 2021 VL 38 IS 4 SI SI BP 671 EP 689 DI 10.1108/IMR-12-2018-0362 PG 19 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA TN5MJ UT WOS:000676278100004 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kegel, K DeBlaere, C AF Kegel, Karen DeBlaere, Cirleen TI Universal-Diverse Orientation in Asian International Students: Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Miville-Guzman Universality-Diversity Scale, Short Form SO CULTURAL DIVERSITY & ETHNIC MINORITY PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE universal-diverse orientation; Asian international students ID MULTICULTURAL PERSONALITY; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; CULTURAL-VALUES; NONNORMALITY; RELIABILITY; ROBUSTNESS; VALIDATION; AMERICAN; INTERNET; FIT AB Despite apparent relevance to Asian international students, universal-diverse orientation (UDO) has not been psychometrically validated with this population. The current study investigated the most researched UDO measure, the Miville-Guzman Universality-Diversity Scale, Short Form (M-GUDS-S; Fuertes, Miville, Mohr, Sedlacek, & Gretchen, 2000), with 333 Asian international college students. The M-GUDS-S evidenced good reliability and convergent validity, and analyses confirmed a three-factor structure, supporting expanded use of the scale. C1 [Kegel, Karen] Lehigh Univ, Dept Counseling Psychol, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA. [DeBlaere, Cirleen] Georgia State Univ, Dept Counseling & Psychol Serv, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA. C3 Lehigh University; University System of Georgia; Georgia State University RP Kegel, K (corresponding author), Lehigh Univ, Coll Educ, Iacocca Hall,111 Res Dr, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA. 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Divers. Ethn. Minor. Psychol. PD JUL PY 2014 VL 20 IS 3 BP 469 EP 474 DI 10.1037/a0034746 PG 6 WC Ethnic Studies; Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Ethnic Studies; Psychology GA CB2FB UT WOS:000349441100017 PM 25045958 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lim, K Meier, EB AF Lim, Keol Meier, Ellen B. TI International students' use of social network services in the new culture: a case study with Korean youths in the United States SO ASIA PACIFIC EDUCATION REVIEW LA English DT Article DE International students' acculturation; Asian culture; Internet access; Social network service ID STRESS AB In the United States, international students, especially from Asia, have reportedly experienced difficulty adjusting to their new life and culture. Little research has been done to understand the role of social network service (SNS)s, including instant messaging, blogs, chatting websites, and email on these students. 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PD MAR PY 2012 VL 13 IS 1 BP 113 EP 120 DI 10.1007/s12564-011-9173-x PG 8 WC Education & Educational Research WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA 956ZH UT WOS:000305127600011 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Im, EO Ho, TH Brown, A Chee, W AF Im, Eun-Ok Ho, Tsung-Han Brown, Adama Chee, Wonshik TI Acculturation and the Cancer Pain Experience SO JOURNAL OF TRANSCULTURAL NURSING LA English DT Article DE acculturation; cancer pain; Asian; Hispanic ID SYMPTOMS; SCALE AB Purpose: Using a feminist perspective, the relationship between acculturation and cancer pain experience was explored. Design: This was a cross-sectional, correlational Internet study among 104 Hispanic and 114 Asian cancer patients. The instruments included both unidimensional and multidimensional cancer pain measures. Findings: There were significant differences in cancer pain scores by country of birth. Yet there was no significant association of acculturation to cancer pain scores. Discussion and Conclusions: This study indicated inconsistent findings. Implications for Practice: To provide directions for adequate cancer pain management, further studies with a larger number of diverse groups of immigrant cancer patients are needed. C1 [Im, Eun-Ok] Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, Austin, TX 78701 USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin RP Im, EO (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, 1700 Red River, Austin, TX 78701 USA. 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Transcult. Nurs. PD OCT PY 2009 VL 20 IS 4 BP 358 EP 370 DI 10.1177/1043659609334932 PG 13 WC Nursing WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Nursing GA 494AA UT WOS:000269780300002 PM 19376965 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Maiorescu, RD AF Maiorescu, Roxana D. TI Personal public relations and celebrity scandals A cross-cultural analysis of Twitter communication in the aftermath of Johnny Depp's accusations of domestic violence SO JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION MANAGEMENT LA English DT Article DE Culture; Social media; Public relations; Crisis communication; Relationship management; Marketing communications ID PARASOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS; MEDIATING ROLE; IDENTIFICATION; IMAGE; INFORMATION; IMPACT; AUDIENCE; USERS AB Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between personal public relations practices, which trigger parasocial relationships between celebrities and their followers, and initial reactions to celebrity crises. For this purpose, the study analyzed Johnny Depp's (JD's) communication practices over a period of 15 years and assessed online perceptions of responsibility attribution and message valence in the aftermath of JD's 2016 divorce and accusations of domestic violence. Design/methodology/approach - The study employed the case study methodology and analyzed two data sets. First, a frequency analysis was conducted to determine the most prevalent cultural dimensions (Hofstede, 2011) present in JD's interviews (n = 116). Second, several chi(2) tests were run on an additional sample of analysis (n = 1,044) which comprised reactions on Twitter in the aftermath of the crisis. The study tested whether there was a relationship between culture, responsibility attribution, and message valence. Findings - The results indicate a relationship between the dimension of long-term/short-term orientation and message valence, indulgence/restraint and responsibility attribution and finally, male dominance and message valence. These results suggest that, to a certain degree, the reactions to the crisis analyzed mirrored the celebrity's public relations practices. Namely, cross-culturally initial responsibility attribution and message valence were influenced by the degree to which the celebrity's values carried more weight in a culture than in others. Research limitations/implications - The study only considered tweets that were written in English and stemmed from profiles that identified the location of the users. Furthermore, this analysis took a case study approach and assessed JD's public relations practices. Therefore, it is difficult to generalize the results and their implications especially in circumstances in which celebrities do want to promote an image that deviates from their real identity so as to hide certain less appealing aspects of their lives. Nonetheless, the study represents a step forward toward the transition from marketing celebrities to promoting them transparently and around their personal values. Practical implications - Currently, the entertainment industry is dominated by a marketing approach that commodifies celebrities to the extent to which their promotion deviates significantly from their personal values. As a result of this deviation, the approach makes it difficult to appropriately address crises since the latter constitute unexpected events. In addition, the marketing approach has been shown to further erode a celebrity's well-being and lead to self-destructive behaviors. Conversely, a personal public relations approach allows practitioners to anticipate reactions to crises and respond adequately, therefore reducing further reputational damage. In addition, personal public relations practices trigger parasocial relationships between a celebrity and their followers by focusing on the transparent promotion of a celebrity, and therefore address concerns that celebrities raised in the past with regard to their objectification. Social implications - Personal public relations practices shed light on the reality behind stardom and the promotion of personal values may be inspirational for celebrity followers. While marketing celebrities exposes publics to the glamorous life at Hollywood, personal public relations sheds light on the factors that triggered it, among which commitment, hard work, and/or dedication. Originality/value - Currently, there is a paucity of studies that shed light on personal public relations and parasocial relationships in international contexts. In addition, the strategic communication literature with regard to celebrity crises lacks studies that analyze the publics' reactions to crises. The present study aimed to fill these gaps. C1 [Maiorescu, Roxana D.] Emerson Coll, Dept Mkt Commun, Boston, MA 02116 USA. RP Maiorescu, RD (corresponding author), Emerson Coll, Dept Mkt Commun, Boston, MA 02116 USA. 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Zhou LX, 2013, J BUS RES, V66, P1013, DOI 10.1016/j.jbusres.2011.12.025 NR 65 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 2 U2 41 PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD PI BINGLEY PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND SN 1363-254X EI 1478-0852 J9 J COMMUN MANAG JI J. Commun. Manag. PY 2017 VL 21 IS 3 BP 254 EP 266 DI 10.1108/JCOM-02-2017-0006 PG 13 WC Communication WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Communication GA FC1ZD UT WOS:000406635900003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Nguyen, MH Serik, M Vuong, TT Ho, MT AF Minh-Hoang Nguyen Serik, Meirmanov Thu-Trang Vuong Manh-Tung Ho TI Internationalization and Its Discontents: Help-Seeking Behaviors of Students in a Multicultural Environment Regarding Acculturative Stress and Depression SO SUSTAINABILITY LA English DT Article DE sustainable education; internationalization; international university; higher education; help-seeking; acculturative stress; depression; international student; social connectedness; Japan ID MENTAL-HEALTH; SOCIAL CONNECTEDNESS; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; SELF-CONCEALMENT; UNITED-STATES; ATTITUDES; INTENTIONS; INTERNET; ACCESS; DISCRIMINATION AB Stress and depression can be seen as the major obstacles for sustained education and attainment of foreign students, and in turn, the sustainability of an education system as a whole. However, the mainstream consideration following Berry's model on acculturation does not take into account whether students of the host countries are immune to these problems. This study aims to examine the prevalence and predictors of help-seeking behaviors among international and domestic students in a multicultural environment by employing ANOVA and polynomial regression. Some significant results from this study are: (1) Informal sources were the most prevalent sources of help-seeking among international and domestic students, while formal help-seeking was not popular; (2) international students were more likely to overcome emotional difficulties alone and seek help on the Internet than domestic students; (3) acculturative stress was a positive predictor of formal, informal, and miscellaneous help-seeking behaviors among international students and informal help-seeking behaviors or among domestic students; and (4) depression was negatively correlated with the willingness of international students to seek help from informal sources. The findings hint at the risk of acculturative stress faced by domestic students in a multicultural environment being overlooked and the lack of help-seeking sources for international students. The study also provides empirical evidence for policy-planners to design a sustainable education system better at supporting students dealing with depression and acculturative stress. C1 [Minh-Hoang Nguyen] Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific Univ, Int Cooperat Policy, Grad Sch Asia Pacific Studies, Beppu, Oita 8748577, Japan. [Serik, Meirmanov] Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific Univ, Grad Sch Asia Pacific Studies, Publ Hlth Management Div, Beppu, Oita 8748577, Japan. [Thu-Trang Vuong] Sci Po, Campus Dijon, F-21000 Dijon, France. [Manh-Tung Ho] Phenikaa Univ, Ctr Interdisciplinary Social Res, Hanoi 100803, Vietnam. [Manh-Tung Ho] Phenikaa Univ, Fac Econ & Finance, Hanoi 100803, Vietnam. C3 Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University; Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University RP Serik, M (corresponding author), Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific Univ, Grad Sch Asia Pacific Studies, Publ Hlth Management Div, Beppu, Oita 8748577, Japan.; Ho, MT (corresponding author), Phenikaa Univ, Ctr Interdisciplinary Social Res, Hanoi 100803, Vietnam.; Ho, MT (corresponding author), Phenikaa Univ, Fac Econ & Finance, Hanoi 100803, Vietnam. 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Ross, Michael W. Berg, Rigmor C. Altan, Peyman TI Impact of Migration and Acculturation on Turkish Men Who Have Sex with Men in Germany: Results from the 2010 European MSM Internet Survey SO ARCHIVES OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE Emigrants and immigrants; Homosexuality; Mental health; Migration; Internalized homonegativity; Sexual orientation ID ATTITUDES AB To examine the impact of migration and acculturation of Turkish men who have sex with men (MSM) to Germany, using data from the European MSM Internet Survey (EMIS-2010), on measures of acculturation including circumcision status, internalized homonegativity (IH), HIV/STI knowledge, sexual orientation, outness, HIV-testing, and sexual behaviors. We compared four groups of MSM: MSM born and residing in Germany who had completed the questionnaire in German (n = 38,915), MSM born and residing in Germany, with a father or mother born in Turkey (n = 97), MSM residing in Germany who were born in Turkey or whose parents were born in Turkey (n = 262), and MSM who were born and residing in Turkey and who completed the questionnaire in Turkish (n = 1,717). Data showed that there were significant dose-response curves between level of migration and several outcome variables. As exposure to Germany increased, MSM had lower IH, higher HIV/STI knowledge, increased outness, and were less likely to be circumcised. There were similar significant findings with regard to sexual HIV risk behavior (condomless anal intercourse with partners of unknown (or sero-discordant) HIV status). Data were consistent with acculturation over generations in immigrant groups in MSM migrating from Turkey to Germany. Integration includes both cultural aspects (circumcision) and integration into a more homopositive gay environment (IH, outness, increased HIV/STI knowledge), and sexual HIV risk behavior. Migration and associated acculturation may constitute a risk change for HIV/STI and mental health issues associated with IH and outness. C1 [Schmidt, Axel J.] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Publ Hlth Environm & Soc, Sigma Res, LSHTM, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England. [Ross, Michael W.] Univ Minnesota, Program Human Sexual, Dept Family Med, Med Sch, Minneapolis, MN USA. [Berg, Rigmor C.] Norwegian Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Community Med, Oslo, Norway. [Berg, Rigmor C.] Univ Tromso, Tromso, Norway. [Altan, Peyman] Turkish Publ Hlth Assoc, Ankara, Turkey. C3 University of London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; University of Minnesota System; University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH); UiT The Arctic University of Tromso RP Schmidt, AJ (corresponding author), London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Dept Publ Hlth Environm & Soc, Sigma Res, LSHTM, 15-17 Tavistock Pl, London WC1H 9SH, England. EM axel.j.schmidt@emis-project.eu RI Schmidt, Axel J/J-1855-2019 OI Schmidt, Axel J/0000-0002-6910-4399; Ross, Michael W./0000-0002-5718-9989; Berg, Rigmor/0000-0002-6915-0993 FU European Commission under the EU; CEEISCat (Centre d'Estudis Epidemiologics sobre les ITS/HIV/SIDA de Catalunya), Spain; Department of Health for England; Maastricht University (The Netherlands); Regione del Veneto (Italy); Robert Koch Institute (Germany) FX EMIS-2010 was funded by a grant of the European Commission under the EU Health Programme 2008-2013. Further funding was received from CEEISCat (Centre d'Estudis Epidemiologics sobre les ITS/HIV/SIDA de Catalunya), Spain; Department of Health for England; Maastricht University (The Netherlands); Regione del Veneto (Italy); and Robert Koch Institute (Germany). Further funding for the participation of men in Germany was provided by Bundeszentrale fur gesundheitliche Aufklarung (BZgA), Germany. 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Sex. Behav. PD JAN PY 2023 VL 52 IS 1 BP 283 EP 290 DI 10.1007/s10508-022-02468-4 EA NOV 2022 PG 8 WC Psychology, Clinical; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Social Sciences - Other Topics GA 8R5DW UT WOS:000884945400001 PM 36396921 OA Green Submitted, Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Seven, US Stoll, M Dubbert, D Kohls, C Werner, P Kalbe, E AF Seven, Umran Sema Stoll, Mendy Dubbert, Dennis Kohls, Christian Werner, Petra Kalbe, Elke TI Perception, Attitudes, and Experiences Regarding Mental Health Problems and Web Based Mental Health Information Amongst Young People with and without Migration Background in Germany. A Qualitative Study SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH LA English DT Article DE adolescents; young adults; migrant background; mental illness; health literacy; internet; web information; focus group discussions; qualitative content analysis ID MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; LITERACY; ADOLESCENTS; PREVALENCE; CHILDREN; BELIEFS; ACCULTURATION; CHILDHOOD; KNOWLEDGE AB Mental illnesses in adolescence and young adulthood are steadily increasing. Thus, mental disorders represent an individual and societal challenge and an enormous health economic burden, creating an urgent need for research and action. Mental health problems are omnipresent in the life of young people and the internet is the first resource, which helps them to understand their situation. Young people with migration background often have more difficulties accessing health care services. Digital technologies offer an ideal opportunity for a low-threshold platform that addresses the needs of young people. The current project "GeKo:mental" aims to design a multilingual website for Cologne-based adolescents and young adults that will enable them to obtain comprehensive information about mental illness and health, treatment options and first contact points. To design this website, this study aims to find out what kind of health information is needed and how it should best be presented. Nine focus group discussions with adolescents and young adults with and without migration background (N = 68) were conducted; the focus group discussions took place at schools, in an association for social youth work and in an cultural association, which is linked to a mosque in Cologne, Germany. A qualitative content analysis was conducted on the gathered material. The participants reported concrete challenges and needs. The results will form the basis for the development and design of a website. C1 [Seven, Umran Sema; Kalbe, Elke] Univ Cologne, Med Psychol Neuropsychol & Gender Studies, D-50923 Cologne, Germany. [Seven, Umran Sema; Kalbe, Elke] Univ Cologne, Fac Med, Ctr Neuropsychol Diagnost & Intervent CeNDI, D-50923 Cologne, Germany. [Seven, Umran Sema; Kalbe, Elke] Univ Cologne, Univ Hosp Cologne, D-50923 Cologne, Germany. [Stoll, Mendy; Werner, Petra] Univ Appl Sci, TH Koln, Fac Informat Sci & Commun Studies, D-50678 Cologne, Germany. [Dubbert, Dennis; Kohls, Christian] Univ Appl Sci, TH Koln, Fac Comp Sci & Engn Sci, D-50678 Cologne, Germany. C3 University of Cologne; University of Cologne; University of Cologne RP Seven, US (corresponding author), Univ Cologne, Med Psychol Neuropsychol & Gender Studies, D-50923 Cologne, Germany.; Seven, US (corresponding author), Univ Cologne, Fac Med, Ctr Neuropsychol Diagnost & Intervent CeNDI, D-50923 Cologne, Germany.; Seven, US (corresponding author), Univ Cologne, Univ Hosp Cologne, D-50923 Cologne, Germany. EM uemran.seven@uk-koeln.de; mendy.stoll@th-koeln.de; dennis.dubbert@th-koeln.de; christian.kohls@th-koeln.de; petra.werner@th-koeln.de; elke.kalbe@uk-koeln.de OI Dubbert, Dennis/0000-0002-6624-170X FU RheinEnergieStiftung Jugend/Beruf, Wissenschaft [W-18-2-001, W-18-2-002]; Medical Psychology, Neuropsychology and Gender Studies and Center for Neuropsychological Diagnostics and Intervention (CeNDI), University of Cologne, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne FX This research was funded by RheinEnergieStiftung Jugend/Beruf, Wissenschaft, for the project "Starkung der Gesundheitskompetenz fur psychische Gesundheit bei Jugendlichen und jungen Erwachsenen mit und ohne Migrationshintergrund durch digitale Tool (GeKo:mental)", grant number W-18-2-001 and W-18-2-002. The APC was funded by Medical Psychology, Neuropsychology and Gender Studies and Center for Neuropsychological Diagnostics and Intervention (CeNDI), University of Cologne, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne. 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Public Health PD JAN PY 2021 VL 18 IS 1 AR 81 DI 10.3390/ijerph18010081 PG 24 WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA PQ6OJ UT WOS:000606662800001 PM 33374310 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Wallington, SF Luta, G Noone, AM Caicedo, L Lopez-Class, M Sheppard, V Spencer, C Mandelblatt, J AF Wallington, Sherrie Flynt Luta, Gheorghe Noone, Anne-Michelle Caicedo, Larisa Lopez-Class, Maria Sheppard, Vanessa Spencer, Cherie Mandelblatt, Jeanne TI Assessing the Awareness of and Willingness to Participate in Cancer Clinical Trials Among Immigrant Latinos SO JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Clinical trial awareness; Clinical trial participation; Latinos; Informational channels; Health disparities ID INFORMATION-SERVICE; HEALTH; COMMUNITY; EDUCATION; RISK; RECOMMENDATION; ACCULTURATION; PREDICTORS; PREVENTION; HISPANICS AB Clinical trials are considered the gold standard of evidence about the efficacy of cancer prevention, early detection, and treatment interventions. A paucity of data exists on determinants of clinical trial participation in the growing US Latino population despite poor cancer outcomes in this group. This study seeks to describe correlates of awareness of and willingness to participate in clinical trials among largely Central, North, and South American Latinos using safety-net clinics. Between June 2007 and November 2008, we conducted an interviewer-administered, Spanish-language cross-sectional survey (n = 944). Logistic regression was used to assess effects of health information sources and psychosocial variables on awareness of and intention to participate in clinical trials. Analyses were completed in spring 2010. While only 48% knew what a clinical trial was, when explained, 65% indicated a willingness to participate. Providers were the most common source of health information. Use of Internet for health information, trust in health information, and higher education each independently increased the odds of clinical trial awareness, but obtaining information from providers did not. Contacting the Cancer Information Service and psychosocial factors were each independently associated with intent to join a clinical trial, while demographic factors were not. Information channels such as the Internet may be effective in conveying clinical trial information to Latinos. Providers being cited as the most common source of health information but not being associated with knowledge about or intent to participate in trials suggests a missed opportunity for communication to this population. C1 [Wallington, Sherrie Flynt; Luta, Gheorghe; Noone, Anne-Michelle; Lopez-Class, Maria; Sheppard, Vanessa; Mandelblatt, Jeanne] Georgetown Univ, Sch Med, Lombardi Comprehens Canc Ctr, Washington, DC 20057 USA. [Wallington, Sherrie Flynt; Luta, Gheorghe; Noone, Anne-Michelle; Lopez-Class, Maria; Sheppard, Vanessa; Mandelblatt, Jeanne] Med Ctr, Washington, DC 20057 USA. [Caicedo, Larisa] Nueva Vida DC Metro Off, Washington, DC 20036 USA. [Spencer, Cherie] Howard Univ, Ctr Canc, Washington, DC 20060 USA. C3 Georgetown University; Howard University RP Wallington, SF (corresponding author), Georgetown Univ, Sch Med, Lombardi Comprehens Canc Ctr, Res Bldg,W326A,3970 Reservoir Rd NW, Washington, DC 20057 USA. EM slw49@georgetown.edu OI Luta, Gheorghe/0000-0002-4035-7632; Luta, George/0000-0001-9013-2207; Sheppard, Vanessa/0000-0003-2874-6659 FU NCI NIH HHS [U01 CA114593, K05 CA096940, P30 CA051008, U01 CA114593-03S3, P30CA51008, KO5 CA96940, K01 CA155417] Funding Source: Medline CR Alvarez RA, 2006, WESTERN J NURS RES, V28, P541, DOI 10.1177/0193945906287215 [Anonymous], 1994, NIH GUIDE [Anonymous], 2009, CANC FACTS FIG HISP Baquet Claudia R, 2008, Semin Oncol Nurs, V24, P262, DOI 10.1016/j.soncn.2008.08.006 Bazargan M, 2003, CELL MOL BIOL, V49, P1213 Brandon DT, 2005, J NATL MED ASSOC, V97, P951 Bright MA, 2007, J CANCER EDUC, V22, pS2, DOI 10.1007/BF03174340 Brown M, 2010, ETHNIC HEALTH, V15, P223, DOI 10.1080/13557851003624281 DiMaggio P, 2001, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V27, P307, DOI 10.1146/annurev.soc.27.1.307 Ellington L, 2006, PSYCHO-ONCOL, V15, P273, DOI 10.1002/pon.943 Fiandt K, 2010, J AM ACAD NURSE PRAC, V22, P474, DOI 10.1111/j.1745-7599.2010.00536.x Gazzinelli MF, 2010, PLOS NEGLECT TROP D, V4, DOI 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000749 Joseph G, 2009, CONTEMP CLIN TRIALS, V30, P552, DOI 10.1016/j.cct.2009.06.009 Julliard K, 2008, ANN FAM MED, V6, P543, DOI 10.1370/afm.912 Katapodi MC, 2004, PREV MED, V38, P388, DOI 10.1016/j.ypmed.2003.11.012 Keller C, 2006, J CARDIOVASC NURS, V21, P142, DOI 10.1097/00005082-200603000-00012 Kiin SE, 2008, ARCH INTERN MED, V168, P728, DOI 10.1001/archinte.168.7.728 Kreps GL, 2007, J CANCER EDUC, V22, pS70, DOI 10.1007/BF03174349 Lara M, 2005, ANNU REV PUBL HEALTH, V26, P367, DOI 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.144615 Larkey LK, 2008, APPL NURS RES, V21, P30, DOI 10.1016/j.apnr.2006.09.003 Lawsin CR, 2007, HEALTH SOC CARE COMM, V15, P369, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-2524.2007.00695.x Lewin ME, 2000, AM HLTH CARE SAFETY Mandelblatt J, 2005, PREV MED, V40, P611, DOI 10.1016/j.ypmed.2004.09.004 MARIN G, 1987, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V9, P183, DOI 10.1177/07399863870092005 Murthy VH, 2004, JAMA-J AM MED ASSOC, V291, P2720, DOI 10.1001/jama.291.22.2720 Orom H, 2010, CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR, V19, P746, DOI 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-09-1085 Pena-Purcell N, 2008, J MED LIBR ASSOC, V96, P101, DOI 10.3163/1536-5050.96.2.101 Ramanadhan S, 2006, HEALTH COMMUN, V20, P131, DOI 10.1207/s15327027hc2002_4 Sarkar U, 2006, DIABETES CARE, V29, P823, DOI 10.2337/diacare.29.04.06.dc05-1615 Shavers VL, 2002, ANN EPIDEMIOL, V12, P248, DOI 10.1016/S1047-2797(01)00265-4 Sheppard VB, 2008, J GEN INTERN MED, V23, P2024, DOI 10.1007/s11606-008-0815-6 Sheppard VB, 2005, J GEN INTERN MED, V20, P444, DOI 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2005.0083.x Shokar NK, 2009, FAM MED, V41, P427 Umutyan A, 2008, CANCER-AM CANCER SOC, V112, P212, DOI 10.1002/cncr.23170 *US CENS BUR, 2010, AM COMM SURV DEM HOU Wendler D, 2006, PLOS MED, V3, P201, DOI 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030019 NR 36 TC 45 Z9 46 U1 1 U2 8 PU SPRINGER PI NEW YORK PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA SN 0094-5145 EI 1573-3610 J9 J COMMUN HEALTH JI J. Community Health PD APR PY 2012 VL 37 IS 2 BP 335 EP 343 DI 10.1007/s10900-011-9450-y PG 9 WC Health Policy & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Health Care Sciences & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 936KY UT WOS:000303590500012 PM 21805372 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Garcia, J Vargas, N de la Torre, C Alvarez, MM Clark, JL AF Garcia, Jonathan Vargas, Nancy de la Torre, Cynthia Alvarez, Mario Magana Clark, Jesse Lawton TI Engaging Latino Families About COVID-19 Vaccines: A Qualitative Study Conducted in Oregon, USA SO HEALTH EDUCATION & BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE COVID-19 vaccines; culturally centered health promotion; Latino families; Oregon ID MEDICAL MISTRUST; HEALTH-CARE; ACCULTURATION; BEHAVIORS; SUPPORT; YOUTH AB Objectives Latinos are disproportionately vulnerable to severe COVID-19 due to workplace exposure, multigenerational households, and existing health disparities. Rolling out COVID-19 vaccines among vulnerable Latinos is critical to address disparities. This study explores vaccine perceptions of Latino families to inform culturally centered strategies for vaccine dissemination. Method Semistructured telephone interviews with Latino families (22 mothers and 24 youth, 13-18 years old) explored COVID-19 vaccine perceptions including (1) sources of information, (2) trust of vaccine effectiveness and willingness to get vaccinated, and (3) access to the vaccine distribution. We identified thematic patterns using immersion-crystallization. Results We found that (1) 41% expressed optimism and willingness to receive the vaccine coupled with concerns about side effects; (2) 45% expressed hesitancy or would refuse vaccination based on mistrust, myths, fear of being used as "guinea pigs," and the perceived role of politics in vaccine development; (3) families "digested" information gathered from social media, the news, and radio through intergenerational communication; and (4) participants called for community-led advocacy and "leading by example" to dispel fear and misinformation. Optimistic participants saw the vaccine as a way to protect their families, allowing youth to return to schools and providing safer conditions for frontline essential workers. Conclusions Culturally centered vaccine promotion campaigns may consider the Latino family unit as their target audience by providing information that can be discussed among parents and youth, engaging a range of health providers and advocates that includes traditional practitioners and community health workers, and disseminating information at key venues, such as schools, churches, and supermarkets. C1 [Garcia, Jonathan; Vargas, Nancy; Alvarez, Mario Magana] Oregon State Univ, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA. [de la Torre, Cynthia] Casa Latinos Unidos, Corvallis, OR USA. [Clark, Jesse Lawton] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA. C3 Oregon State University; University of California System; University of California Los Angeles RP Garcia, J (corresponding author), Oregon State Univ, Coll Publ Hlth & Human Sci, 2520 SW Campus Way,Milam 118C, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA. EM jonathan.garcia@oregonstate.edu FU Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [75575] FX The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Support for this research was provided by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Grant No. 75575). The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Foundation. 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Behav. PD DEC PY 2021 VL 48 IS 6 BP 747 EP 757 AR 10901981211045937 DI 10.1177/10901981211045937 EA OCT 2021 PG 11 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA WV2CX UT WOS:000705147400001 PM 34596462 OA Green Published, hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Robles, G Lopez-Matos, J Cienfuegos-Szalay, J Rodriguez-Diaz, CE Rendina, HJ AF Robles, Gabriel Lopez-Matos, Jonathan Cienfuegos-Szalay, Jorge Rodriguez-Diaz, Carlos E. Rendina, H. Jonathon TI The Use of a Spanish-Translated PrEP Stigma Scale Among the Latino Sample of the UNITE Cohort Study SO STIGMA AND HEALTH LA English DT Article; Early Access DE PrEP cascade; language; HIV prevention; biomedical intervention ID ITEM-RESPONSE THEORY; PREEXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS PREP; HIV-RELATED STIGMA; MINORITY STRESS; MENTAL-HEALTH; RISK BEHAVIOR; LOS-ANGELES; SEX; ACCULTURATION; TRANSNATIONALISM AB Preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP)-related stigma is linked to inadequate PrEP uptake, yet there are no validated scales to test this association among Spanish-speaking Latino sexual minority men (SMM). The present study examined if the Spanish-translated PrEP Stigma Scale (PSS) was psychometrically appropriate for implementing in Spanish language-dominant Latino SMM. Recruitment was conducted using geosocial networking applications, social media sites, and email blasts (N = 3,049). First, we utilized item response theory (IRT) modeling to evaluate the reliability of the PSS items and the latent construct across both language groups (nEnglish = 2,844 and nSpanish = 205). Subsequently, we applied the PSS scale in a theoretical application by examining its association with key steps in the PrEP uptake cascade (i.e., perceived PrEP candidacy, PrEP willingness, PrEP intentions, and having spoken to provider about PrEP) stratified by language. Results of the IRT analyses provided evidence that the translated version of the PSS was appropriate for use among this sample. Further, among English respondents, PrEP stigma was negatively associated with perceived PrEP candidacy (B = -0.30, p < .001), PrEP willingness (B = -0.46, p < .001), and PrEP intentions (B = -0.23, p = .003). PrEP stigma, among Spanish respondents, was not significantly associated with any of the PrEP cascade steps. This study demonstrated that the PSS scale performs adequately for both English-and Spanish-speaking Latino SMM. However, researchers and health professionals alike should pay close attention to the nuanced effects in U.S.-based English-and Spanish language samples as PrEP stigma may impact the PrEP cascade for one language sample and not the other. C1 [Robles, Gabriel] Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, 390 George St,6th Floor, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA. [Lopez-Matos, Jonathan; Cienfuegos-Szalay, Jorge] CUNY, Grad Ctr, Doctoral Program Hlth Psychol & Clin Sci, New York, NY 10021 USA. [Rodriguez-Diaz, Carlos E.; Rendina, H. Jonathon] George Washington Univ, Milken Inst, Sch Publ Hlth, Washington, DC 20052 USA. [Rendina, H. Jonathon] Whitman Walker Inst, Washington, DC USA. C3 Rutgers State University New Brunswick; City University of New York (CUNY) System; George Washington University RP Robles, G (corresponding author), Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, 390 George St,6th Floor, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA. EM gabriel.robles@rutgers.edu FU National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; National Institute of Mental Health; Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; National Institute on Drug Abuse [UG3-AI133674]; Research Supplements to Promote Diversity in Health-Related Research from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [3UH3AI133674-04S1] FX This study was funded by a joint award from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Mental Health, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and National Institute on Drug Abuse (Grant: UG3-AI133674, PI: H. Jonathon Rendina). The analysis of this study was supported by a Research Supplements to Promote Diversity in Health-Related Research from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (Grant: 3UH3AI133674-04S1, Awardee: Gabriel Robles).The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose CR Adam B.D., 2011, CAN J HUM SEX, V20, P11 Alegria M, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P996, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.07.006 Alzate-Duque Luis, 2021, MedEdPORTAL, V17, P11110, DOI 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11110 [Anonymous], 2016, C H R PROGRAM Arbona C, 2010, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V32, P362, DOI 10.1177/0739986310373210 Barnert ES, 2020, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V110, pS63, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2019.305374 Berry JW, 2006, MON PARENT, P13 Berry J. 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This was a secondary analysis of the data from two national Internet survey studies. Questions on background characteristics and immigration transition and the Depression Index for Midlife Women were used to collect the data. The data were analyzed using inferential statistics including multiple regressions. Immigrants reported lower numbers of symptoms and less severe symptoms than nonimmigrants (p <.01). When controlling for background characteristics, self-reported racial/ethnic identity and immigration status were significant predictors of depressive symptoms (R-2 =.01, p <.05). C1 [Im, Eun-Ok; Chang, Sun Ju; Chee, Wonshik] Univ Penn, Sch Nursing, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. [Chee, Eunice] Univ Penn, Sch Engn & Appl Sci, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. [Mao, Jun James] Univ Penn, Sch Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. C3 University of Pennsylvania; University of Pennsylvania; University of Pennsylvania RP Im, EO (corresponding author), Univ Penn, Sch Nursing, Claire M Fagin Hall,418 Curie Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. EM eunim@nursing.upenn.edu OI Chang, Sun Ju/0000-0001-6967-1564 FU National Institutes of Health (NIH/NINR/NIA); National Institutes of Health (NIH/NINR/NHLBI) [R01NR008926, R01NR010568] FX The original two studies that provided the data for this secondary analysis were funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH/NINR/NIA and NIH/NINR/NHLBI; R01NR008926 and R01NR010568). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. 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PD APR 3 PY 2015 VL 36 IS 4 BP 439 EP 456 DI 10.1080/07399332.2014.924518 PG 18 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Women's Studies WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Women's Studies GA CF1QO UT WOS:000352322900007 PM 24875592 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Fogel, J Ford, DE AF Fogel, J Ford, DE TI Stigma beliefs of Asian Americans with depression in an Internet sample SO CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHIATRIE LA English DT Article; Proceedings Paper CT 23rd Annual Conference of the Canadian-Academy-of-Child-and-Adolescent-Psychiatry CY NOV 02-04, 2003 CL Halifax, CANADA SP Canadian Acad Child & Adolescent Psychiat DE stigma; Asian Americans; depression; culture; acculturation; children; adolescents ID PRIMARY-CARE PATIENTS; CHINESE-AMERICANS; HELP-SEEKING; LOS-ANGELES; ATTITUDES; PREVALENCE; PROGRAM AB Objective: To study the beliefs of Asian Americans with depression about stigma associated with depression treatment among friends, employers, and family. Method: Participants completed the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D) anonymously on the Internet. In this cross-sectional design, those who screened positive for depression were asked questions regarding stigma (n = 68 656). We used analysis of variance (ANOVA) and analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) to compare Asian Americans with whites and also to make comparisons by age and sex. Further, we stratified for Asian Americans and used ANOVA and ANCOVA to compare age and sex. We used linear regression to assess how stigma beliefs were associated with self-reported need for depression treatment. Results: Asian Americans overall had greater stigma beliefs than did whites for all 3 stigma outcomes (P < 0.001), especially those related to family. Although this same pattern existed for subjects aged between 16 and 29 years and between 30 and 45 years (P < 0.001), among those aged under 16 years, this existed for family stigma (P < 0.001) but not for friends or employer stigma. In our stratified analyses among Asian Americans, male participants had greater stigma beliefs than did female participants for friends (P < 0.001) and employer (P < 0.05) but not for family. Conclusions: The pattern of Asian Americans having greater stigma levels than whites may be changing among younger Asian Americans because of acculturation. Also, among Asian Americans, unlike previous research showing no sex differences for stigma, we show that male participants had greater stigma levels than did female participants. Future directions should include measuring stigma after culture-specific interventions. C1 CUNY Brooklyn Coll, Dept Econ, Brooklyn, NY 11210 USA. Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Epidemiol, Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Baltimore, MD USA. Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Hlth Policy & Management, Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA. Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Dept Med, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA. C3 City University of New York (CUNY) System; Brooklyn College (CUNY); Johns Hopkins University; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; Johns Hopkins University; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; Johns Hopkins University RP Fogel, J (corresponding author), CUNY Brooklyn Coll, Dept Econ, 218A,2900 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11210 USA. 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Through the use of an Internet-based survey, I measured sociodemographic characteristics, level of acculturation, and cultural attitudes (norms) toward violence. The study utilizes the segmented assimilation perspective as a theoretical framework to explain the nature of relationships between pro-violence and acculturative factors. The findings indicate that male superiority and perceptions of overall mistreatment by mainstream society were significant factors predicting the likelihood of support for the use of violence in this sample of Latino males. C1 [Bratina, Michele P.] Shippensburg Univ, Dept Criminal Justice, Criminol, Shippensburg, PA 17257 USA. C3 Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE); Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania RP Bratina, MP (corresponding author), Shippensburg Univ, Dept Criminal Justice, 321 Shippen Hall,1871 Old Main Dr, Shippensburg, PA 17257 USA. 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Justice PY 2015 VL 13 IS 2 BP 131 EP 158 DI 10.1080/15377938.2014.936642 PG 28 WC Criminology & Penology WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Criminology & Penology GA V90NC UT WOS:000212864300003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Al -Haddad, S Sharabati, AAA Al Khasawneh, M Mazahreh, SA Kawar, YT AF Al -Haddad, Shafig Sharabati, Abdel-Aziz Ahmad Al Khasawneh, Mohammad Mazahreh, Seif Aiman Kawar, Yazeed Turki TI Behavioral Acceptance of Electronic Government in Jordan SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC GOVERNMENT RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Attitudes; Behavioral Acceptance; Credibility; Customers' Intention to Use; E -Government; Subjective Norms ID SOCIAL MEDIA; PLS-SEM; ADOPTION; SERVICES; MODEL; TRUST; SATISFACTION; ACCULTURATION; VALIDATION; GOVERNANCE AB Due to the development of communication and information technology, all organizations employ electronic communication to reach their customers and users, especially in developed nations where governments use e-government to support their residents with needed services. In Jordan, the use of e-government services is not as well adopted as in developed nations, because some Jordanians do not trust e-government services due to many reasons, which are discussed in this research; therefore, this study's goal is to determine dimensions that affect people's intentions to use e-government and its effect on e-government actual use in Jordan. The study looks into the factors that impact individuals' intentions and actual e-government usage, including attitudes toward behavior, credibility, and subjective norms that are derived from perceived usefulness, ease of use, awareness, trust in the government, incentives, trust in service delivery, transactional security, and social influence. A total of 352 online questionnaires were gathered, the majority of which were completed by college students who are between the ages of 18 and 29. The findings indicate that perceived ease of use, incentives, and perceived usefulness influence attitudes toward behavior, while awareness does not affect attitudes toward behavior. Trust in service delivery, transactional security, and trust in government affect credibility. Social influences affect subjective norms. Attitudes toward behavior and subjective norms affect intention to use, using intention affects actual usage, while credibility does not affect using intention. Finally, the results are helpful to Jordanian organizations including the Jordanian government. Recommendations are provided in the last section. C1 [Al -Haddad, Shafig; Al Khasawneh, Mohammad; Mazahreh, Seif Aiman; Kawar, Yazeed Turki] Princess Sumaya Univ Technol, Amman, Jordan. [Sharabati, Abdel-Aziz Ahmad] Middle East Univ, Amman, Jordan. C3 Princess Sumaya University for Technology; Middle East University RP Sharabati, AAA (corresponding author), Middle East Univ, Amman, Jordan. 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TI The Influence of Ethnic Identification in Digital Advertising How Hispanic Americans' Response To Pop-Up, E-Mail, and Banner Advertising Affects Online Purchase Intentions SO JOURNAL OF ADVERTISING RESEARCH LA English DT Article ID ACCULTURATION; ATTITUDES; PREFERENCES; INFORMATION; CONSUMERS; ADOPTION; ANGLO; MODEL AB Hispanic Americans' purchasing power and Internet usage are on the rise, but published research on the influence of Web advertising on their purchase intentions online is still scarce. This study explores Hispanic-American attitudes toward banner, e-mail, pop-up advertising, and purchase intentions and accounts for ethnic identification (i.e., strength of association to the Hispanic culture) and selected demographics. The results vary among the three types of online advertising and indicate that attitudes toward online advertising and purchase intentions online are significantly related to ethnic identification... but not in the expected direction. The major findings and their implications are discussed. C1 [Becerra, Enrique P.] Texas State Univ, Dept Mkt, San Marcos, TX USA. [Korgaonkar, Pradeep K.] Florida Atlantic Univ, Boca Raton, FL 33431 USA. C3 Texas State University System; Texas State University San Marcos; State University System of Florida; Florida Atlantic University RP Becerra, EP (corresponding author), Texas State Univ, Dept Mkt, San Marcos, TX USA. 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Advert. Res. PD SEP PY 2010 VL 50 IS 3 BP 279 EP 291 DI 10.2501/S0021849910091440 PG 13 WC Business; Communication WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics; Communication GA 653TI UT WOS:000282119400008 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Grum, BB AF Grum, Bojan Bojan TI Impact of facilities maintenance on user satisfaction SO FACILITIES LA English DT Article DE Facilities management; Serbia; Expectation; Maintenance; User satisfaction; Slovenia ID PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT; NEIGHBORHOOD; CRIME; FEAR; IDENTIFICATION; PERCEPTIONS; ENVIRONMENT; SERBIA; KPIS AB Purpose - This paper aims to focus on how participants link the degree of satisfaction regarding the living conditions and the level of maintenance of facilities. The authors were interested in cross-cultural comparison between Slovenia and Serbia. Design/methodology/approach - The main instrument for measuring the participants' level of satisfaction is a questionnaire formed by the authors. The study of the questionnaire was conducted in two phases. Statistical analysis of the first phase covering factor analysis of the questionnaire and analysis of the reliability of the questionnaire (Cronbach's alpha) in the second phase, descriptive statistics and analysis of variance were used. The study involved 1,006 Slovenian and 385 Serbian participants. Data were statistically analyzed by analysis of variance. Findings - The results show that the Slovenian and Serbian participants express a statistically significant difference in the degree of satisfaction regarding the level of maintenance of the living environment, namely, with regard to the location of the real estate, the size of housing units, central heating and a sense of social belonging to the neighborhood. The overall picture shows that Slovenian participants have a considerably higher degree of satisfaction regarding the living conditions in the neighborhood and regarding the level of maintaining facilities than Serbian participations. Research limitations/implications - These are potential risks of error arising from the use of assumptions, limited sample size and data from the secondary resources. Practical implications - The results show that the law must clearly define the obligations of professional managers who will have to hold licenses to manage buildings. The residential community could be put into receivership if it is not organized in compliance with the law until it is regulated. That leads to efficient and streamlined maintenance costs and results in a better-quality living environment where users expect to reflect a higher degree of sense of security, a sense of social belonging to the neighborhood and consequently a higher degree of satisfaction. Social implications - In this study, the authors were interested in how the participants link the level of satisfaction with the living conditions and the level of facilities maintenance. In doing so, the authors were also interested in living environment parameters, such as location, size, illumination, noise and old apartments, old neighborhoods, internet access, central heating and a sense of security in the neighborhood, a sense of social belonging and a sense of living environment and suitable economic status. Originality/value - The major contributions of this paper are as follows: the law must clearly define the obligations of professional managers who will have to hold a license to manage the building. The adoption of the "Facilities Maintenance Law" helped promote the overall legal and economic climate in the country, which led to the increase of investments in all areas of economic and social life, as well as to a higher level of residential "well-being" (sense of security, sense of social belonging to the neighborhood and consequently a higher level of satisfaction). C1 [Grum, Bojan Bojan] Constructa, Ljubljana, Slovenia. RP Grum, BB (corresponding author), Constructa, Ljubljana, Slovenia. 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Researchers investigating media use of international students in Dalian, China initially assumed outcomes consistent with results in other locations. Survey results revealed different patterns of usage, however, most likely attributable to the unique media environment in Chinese universities where the only television and newspapers readily available to students are state owned and provide only official perspectives on the news. Improvement of Internet access and provision of more Chinese newspapers and television stations to sets in student dormitories by universities might facilitate greater cultural adaptation by international students and improve their perceptions of study in China. C1 [Zhu, Runping] Monash Univ, Sch Media Film & Journalism, Fac Arts, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. [Krever, Richard] Monash Univ, Monash Business Sch, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. C3 Monash University; Monash University RP Zhu, RP (corresponding author), Monash Univ, Sch Media Film & Journalism, Fac Arts, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. EM runping.zhu@monash.edu RI Zhu, Runping/GYV-6119-2022 OI Zhu, Runping/0000-0003-3302-7376; ZHU, Runping/0000-0002-1326-8087; Krever, Richard/0000-0002-1529-5070 FU Social Science Planning Fund Program, Liaoning Province [L13DKS019] FX This work was supported by the Social Science Planning Fund Program, Liaoning Province [grant number L13DKS019]. 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Media Cult. Stud. PY 2017 VL 31 IS 2 BP 307 EP 324 DI 10.1080/10304312.2016.1257692 PG 18 WC Cultural Studies; Communication; Film, Radio, Television WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) SC Cultural Studies; Communication; Film, Radio & Television GA EM2OC UT WOS:000395154400013 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ramchandani, M Coste-Maniere, I AF Ramchandani, Mukta Coste-Maniere, Ivan TI Asymmetry in Multi-Cultural Luxury Communication: A Comparative Analysis on Luxury Brand Communication in India and China SO JOURNAL OF GLOBAL FASHION MARKETING LA English DT Article DE Multicultural luxury communication; Luxury brand Communication strategy; Mimetic desire; Consumer behavior in India and China AB A luxury brand strongly differentiates itself from the universe of classic consumption goods, resulting in a different way of communication than just "making sales". A basic idea starts from making people dream and aspire. In luxury one applies the communication strategy in order to create a dream and to recharge a brand's value, not just in order to sell (Kapferer and Bastien, 2009). Through previous researches in the past, scholars have identified a number of concepts which influence consumer's purchase intention, perceived values and attitudes towards luxury brands. Those findings contribute to understanding in general about individuals' motives and pattern of luxury consumption. Whereas, most of the studies were conducted in developed nations regardless of emerging markets like China. (Wiedmann et al., 2007; Wang et al., 2010, 2011). The luxury and fashion brands are focusing on the penetration in the emerging markets and are creating a large consumer base with dependence on communication strategy but in the long term this has a negative affect since it should be critical for them to understand what consumer values trigger the purchase of their brands and why? Theoretical backdrop in the past has neither been much established between the asymmetry of brand communication in the developed and developing countries nor between the cognitive responses of consumers and the brand identity. As such, developing a deeper understanding about the influence of implemented strategies upon brand identities in consumer buying patterns is relevant key in determining how such practices can confer and be followed in developed and developing economies. Giving a competitive advantage on all adopting firms or the ones that intend to embed and capitalize on their business practices. This research is focused on the asymmetry in multicultural luxury communication but it is centralized around the comparative analysis of luxury communication between India and China with a minor focus on France. France for long has been considered the origin of luxury and fashion industry and it sets as a suitable example for this research. France is a significant market for luxury brands and is prevalent since years due to the heritage and exclusive artisan values imparted in the brand image targeted at the consumers who are more like connoisseurs and are aware of the product they are considering luxury. Ethical and moral considerations impact the purchase of luxury products. Communication can be portraying bling bling in some cultures and in some it could be under the jurisdiction of censorship. Sometimes, it's a trend which is followed by the "peer feedback" or the "word of mouth". But sometimes there are the direct communicative tools used by the brands through magazines, billboard, internet and social media that have a strong impact on the mindset. The objectives of this research were achieved through adoption of two perspectives simultaneously - of the communication strategies adopted by the luxury brands and of the customer. Countries are compared by various dimensional scales and culture can be quantified but also it could be correlated with different aspects of consumption. This research has tried to answer the questions like - how do luxury brands influence the luxury consumers based on multicultural paradigms? What are the major consumer motivations in India, China and France for buying a luxury product? Which brands are perceived as luxury, where and why? What are the converging and diverging factors that determine the modes of communication implemented? The multifaceted dimensions and concepts involved in cross-cultural communication like cognitive response theory, mimetic desire, celebrity influences on potential consumers of the luxury and fashion brands are well studied in this research through the survey and the in depth interview. The questionnaire was designed considering the participant's responses with their motivational factors, places of purchasing, impact of celebrity endorsements, attractiveness and expertise on the brand communications adopted in their country. Due to the lack of extensive secondary data present on the communication strategies for China the focused group interviews and a personal interview are considered as the major approaches for collecting the data. It provided the benchmark to allow for various forms of imperfect markets in simulation to explain the probable outcomes of the luxury brand communication in China. The literature review comprises of the elements, concepts and theories related to the consumer behavior, the modes of communications adopted and how they impact the countries. The secondary data and the relation with Hofstede's five dimensional cultural differences has been related to the findings and observations made with the Primary data for China, India and France. This method is based on the originality and is direct. We have drawn and inference through this study that the luxury brands can be more proactive and more cultural conscious when entering huge multicultural economy like India and China which must not be hindered with the traditional communication process of portraying the brand identity to the connoisseur category and thus prevent value shifts amongst the brand positioning. With the lesser dependency on making a brand fall prey to a trend it should strategically be identified as market driving than the market driven force. This new step could serve as the launch pad in increasing the brand value catering to the aspirational and admirational consumers. Confirming the interest of the potential consumers to consolidate and support a brand's positioning as luxury. Furthermore, diverging the impact from "conspicuous consumption" to "brand loyalty". The structure of this paper constitutes the introduction of the concepts involved in the study, research methodology, discussion and conclusion with the merger of solutions for managerial implications. C1 [Ramchandani, Mukta] Skema Business Sch, MSC Luxury & Fash Management, Sophia Antipolis, France. [Coste-Maniere, Ivan] SKEMA Business Sch, Mkt, F-06902 Sophia Antipolis, France. C3 SKEMA Business School; SKEMA Business School RP Ramchandani, M (corresponding author), Skema Business Sch, MSC Luxury & Fash Management, Sophia Antipolis, France. 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Glob. Fash. Mark. PY 2012 VL 3 IS 2 BP 89 EP 97 DI 10.1080/20932685.2012.10593111 PG 9 WC Business WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Business & Economics GA VA1PF UT WOS:000409679600005 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Renzaho, AMN Mansouri, F Counted, V Polonsky, M AF Renzaho, Andre M. N. Mansouri, Fethi Counted, Victor Polonsky, Michael TI The Influence Region of Origin, Area of Residence Prior to Migration, Religion, and Perceived Discrimination on Acculturation Strategies Among sub-Saharan African Migrants in Australia SO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION LA English DT Article DE Religious affiliation; Discrimination; Cultural integration; Acculturation; sub-Saharan African migrants ID KOREAN IMMIGRANTS; BLOOD-DONATION; ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; MEDICAL MISTRUST; SOCIAL MEDIA; IDENTITY; MINORITY; LANGUAGE; SCALE AB The study examined whether there was an influence of region of origin, area, or residence prior to migration, religion, and perceived discrimination on the acculturation strategies of sub-Saharan African migrants in Australia. These factors have been found to affect acculturation, given the multi-dimensionality of identify formation. Data were obtained on 425 sub-Saharan African migrants and refugees living in Victoria and South Australia. Acculturation was measured using the Vancouver Acculturation Index. Compared to migrants from central Africa, those from eastern Africa (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 0.45; p < 0.01) were less likely to assimilate, while migrants who lived in large towns or the city prior to migration (AOR, 0.54; p < 0.05) were less likely to separate but more likely to assimilate (AOR, 2.26; p < 0.01) than those who came from refugee camps. Compared to Muslims, Christians (AOR, 0.57; p < 0.05) were less likely to integrate while those practising religions other than Islam or Christianity (AOR, 3.54; p < 0.01) were more likely to separate. Migrants reporting not fitting in/excluded were less likely to be in the culturally marginalised group (OR, 0.86; p < 0.01) but more likely to report being integrated (AOR, 1.14; p < 0.01), whereas those reporting personal discrimination (AOR, 1.12; p < 0.01) and societal discrimination (AOR, 1.13; p < 0.01) were more likely to separate or remain traditional. In order to promote cultural pluralism and facilitate cultural adaptations among sub-Saharan African migrants, educational programs, anti-racism policy, and legislative reforms need to reposition multiculturalism in a way that promotes tolerance and acceptance of ethnic, cultural, and religious diversity. C1 [Renzaho, Andre M. N.] Western Sydney Univ, Sch Med, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia. [Renzaho, Andre M. N.] Western Sydney Univ, Translat Hlth Res Inst, Penrith, NSW, Australia. [Renzaho, Andre M. N.] Burnet Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. [Mansouri, Fethi] Deakin Univ, Alfred Deakin Inst Citizenship & Globalisat, Burwood, Vic, Australia. [Counted, Victor] Western Sydney Univ, Sch Psychol, Penrith, NSW, Australia. [Polonsky, Michael] Deakin Univ, Business Sch, Burwood, Vic, Australia. C3 Western Sydney University; Western Sydney University; Burnet Institute; Deakin University; Western Sydney University; Deakin University RP Renzaho, AMN (corresponding author), Western Sydney Univ, Sch Med, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia.; Renzaho, AMN (corresponding author), Western Sydney Univ, Translat Hlth Res Inst, Penrith, NSW, Australia.; Renzaho, AMN (corresponding author), Burnet Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia. EM andre.renzaho@westernsydney.edu.au RI Counted, Victor/AAL-3493-2020 OI Counted, Victor/0000-0003-0944-3775; Mansouri, Fethi/0000-0002-4120-9391; RENZAHO, ANDRE/0000-0002-6844-0833 FU Australian Red Cross Blood FX The authors acknowledge funding from the Australian Red Cross Blood. In addition, they would like to thank the members of the African community who participated in this research. 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Int. Migr. Integr. PD MAR PY 2022 VL 23 IS 1 BP 141 EP 160 DI 10.1007/s12134-021-00829-x EA MAY 2021 PG 20 WC Demography WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Demography GA YY9TM UT WOS:000648065500001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ho, KHM Smith, GD AF Ho, Ken Hok Man Smith, Graeme Drummond TI A discursive paper on the importance of health literacy among foreign domestic workers during outbreaks of communicable diseases SO JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING LA English DT Article DE communicable diseases; community nursing; COVID-19; foreign domestic workers; Health literacy; informal caregivers; public health nursing ID MIGRANT CARE; CAREGIVERS; ACCULTURATION; PEOPLE; SKILLS AB Aim Using an integrated model of health literacy, we discuss the importance of health literacy among foreign domestic workers in the provision of informal caregiving during outbreaks of communicable diseases. COVID-19 pandemic is used as an example. Background Adequate health literacy in the population is known to be important for the prevention of communicable diseases. Foreign domestic workers, a group of marginalised caregivers in private households, are generally presumed to have limited health literacy because of numerous socio-cultural disadvantages. To date, there is limited evidence that these informal healthcare providers receive support from community-based nurses. Design A discursive paper. Conclusion Foreign domestic workers, with varying levels of health literacy, may be viewed either as a resource to break the chain of infection or as a potential reservoir of communicable diseases in the community. Meanwhile, restrictions imposed in response to diseases transmissions (e.g. stay-at-home measures for COVID-19) may directly exacerbate the social support received by these foreign domestic works and their ability to access health-related information. There are also concerns about their ability to appraise and evaluate information related to communicable diseases at a time when fake news and misinformation are being disseminated through social media. Language and cultural barriers are important issues that need to be addressed to ensure that foreign domestic workers are in a position to follow public health recommendations. Relevance to clinical practice Nurses hold an important position in empowering foreign domestic workers with adequate health literacy, by engaging groups of foreign domestic workers in the community and their consulates in planning educational programmes and effectively disseminating information. At a time of global pandemic, an assessment of the health literacy levels of foreign domestic workers in places like Hong Kong is urgently required. C1 [Ho, Ken Hok Man] Tung Wah Coll, Sch Nursing, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. [Smith, Graeme Drummond] Caritas Inst Higher Educ, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. RP Ho, KHM (corresponding author), Tung Wah Coll, Sch Nursing, Hong Kong, Peoples R China. 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D., 1982, RATING SCALE ANAL Wright BD., 2004, MAKING MEASURES NR 44 TC 41 Z9 41 U1 0 U2 1 PU MICHIGAN PUBLISHING PI ANN ARBOR PA 839 GREENE ST, ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 USA SN 1556-4908 EI 1556-5009 J9 J MUSLIM MENT HEALTH JI J. Muslim Ment. Health PY 2008 VL 3 IS 1 BP 69 EP 88 DI 10.1080/15564900802156676 PG 20 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Psychology GA V24XR UT WOS:000215190200007 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Nurgalieva, LA Motygullina, ZA Khisamova, VN AF Nurgalieva, Leila Ayvazovna Motygullina, Zuhra Ayvazovna Khisamova, Venera Nafikovna TI COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF WISH FORMS ON THE EXAMPLE OF TATAR AND ENGLISH ONLINE PUBLICATIONS SO REVISTA ENTRELINGUAS LA English DT Article DE Wish forms; Online publications; Tatar and english language; Congratulations; Celebrations AB This article is devoted to a comparative study of such verbal means of communication as wish forms. They are an important category of speech etiquette, the significance of which in culture and in the life of society as a whole is undeniable. This is probably one of the few units of speech etiquette that can function in parallel with many other phenomena of speech etiquette, such as greetings, farewells, condolences, thanks, advice, etc. The relevance of the topic is due to the growing interest of linguists in the problems of language and culture, the growth of intercultural relations, as well as the need to understand the place and role of verbal communication, as mutually reinforcing each other in one communicative situation, identifying their communicative-pragmatic features in typologically different structural languages, namely Tatar and English. An integrated approach to the study of verbal means of communication in the Tatar and English languages allows us to identify not only their language features, but also to show the national and cultural specifics of the Tatars and the British, to identify the similarities and differences between two completely different cultures. In this article, we decided to consider such most famous and common wishes as Birthdays, Valentine's Day, Christmas, Ramadan, Kurban Bairam, as well as more specific, local holidays like Saybantuy and Nauruz. The choice of this topic is not accidental, since language learning and knowledge of the culture of the country under study should always go side by side. They are inextricably linked to each other. Knowledge of the culture and traditions of the people give us the opportunity to better understand the language, since many words and expressions are a kind of reflection of their traditions. It is well known that the study of foreign languages begins with such seemingly simple formulas as greetings, farewells, thanks and wishes. This topic, in our opinion, allows you to plunge deeper into the culture of the studied country. The best way to realize and understand the depth of the language is to compare it with your native language. Identify both similarities and differences. For a more accurate and in-depth analysis, we decided to consider examples from online sources. This choice as a source is not accidental, since today the Internet is the richest and most complete source of information, since it is there that you can find standard template greetings and postcards. However, in this work, we tried to consider not so much the template greetings used as a model, but the greetings of politicians, celebrities and editorial staff of online publications. Since, living language, in our opinion, is the most interesting and accurate source for comparing two genetically unrelated languages. After analyzing this material, we came to the conclusion that, first of all, the content of the wish is chosen by the speaker with an emphasis on the generally accepted system of values of the listener, his own ideas about what is bad and what is good for the addressee, whether the wish is pleasant or unpleasant to the addressee. C1 [Nurgalieva, Leila Ayvazovna; Motygullina, Zuhra Ayvazovna; Khisamova, Venera Nafikovna] Kazan Fed Univ KPFU, Kazan, Russia. C3 Kazan Federal University RP Nurgalieva, LA (corresponding author), Kazan Fed Univ KPFU, Kazan, Russia. EM lei.pandora@gmail.com; zuhra711@yandex.ru; hisamova@yandex.ru OI Nurgalieva, Leila/0000-0002-0563-5772 CR AKHMETZYANOV I. R., 2018, KAZAN LINGUISTIC J, V1, P57 [Anonymous], 2005, TATAR ADABIYATE GIMADEEVA A. A, 2019, HUMANITIES SOCIAL SC, V7, P1237 Kondrateva I., 2018, CYPRIOT J ED SCI, V13, P529, DOI [10.18844/cjes.v13i4.3858, DOI 10.18844/CJES.V13I4.3858] MEKEKO N. M., 2001, SOPOSTAVITELNYJ ANAL NURGALIEVA L. A., 2019, PRODUCTIVE WAYS FORM, P59 NURTDINOVA G. M, 2018, J SOCIAL SCI RES, V2018, P409 SATTAROVA A., 2019, OPCION-MARACAIBO, V35, P345 VDOVINA E. V., 2001, POZDRAVLENIE POZHELA NR 9 TC 0 Z9 0 U1 0 U2 1 PU UNESP-FACULDADE CIENCIAS & LETRAS PI ARARAQUARA PA DEPT CIENCIAS EDUCACAO, RODOVIA ARARAQUARA-JAU, KM 1-CAIXA POSTAL 174, ARARAQUARA, SP 14800-901, BRAZIL SN 2447-4045 EI 2447-3529 J9 REV ENTRELINGUAS JI Rev. Entrelinguas PY 2021 VL 7 SI 3 AR e021042 DI 10.29051/el.v7iesp.3.15700 PG 18 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA WI9GO UT WOS:000708661800019 OA gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Dashti, FA Yateem, AK AF Dashti, Fatimah A. Yateem, Azizah K. TI Use of Mobile Devices: A Case Study with Children from Kuwait and the United States SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EARLY CHILDHOOD LA English DT Article DE Digital technology; Mobile devices; Early childhood; Children's perspectives; Cross-cultural research AB This study explored children's usage and understandings about mobile devices. The study included 112 children aged 3-5 years, of whom 53 children lived in Kuwait and 59 children lived in the United States. The children were interviewed about their access to and usage of mobile devices, about how they learned to use mobile devices, and the actions and activities in which they engaged with the devices. The findings demonstrated that both Kuwaiti children and children in the United States used mobile devices extensively. Kuwaiti children appeared to have greater access to and usage of mobile devices than children in the United States. Children were able to demonstrate and describe many activities in their usage including answering mobile phones, taking photos and videos, playing games, listening to songs, and watching videos. The research provides children's perspectives about digital devices but also draws attention to the responsibilities of parents and educators to monitor children's usage and teach children about e-safety in their use of these devices. ResumeCette etude explore l'utilisation et la comprehension des appareils mobiles par les enfants. L'etude inclut 112 enfants ages de 3 a 5 ans, dont 53 vivaient au Koweit et 59 aux Etats-Unis. Les enfants ont ete interroges sur leur acces et leur utilisation d'appareils mobiles, sur la facon dont ils ont appris a utiliser les appareils mobiles ainsi que sur les actions et activites dans lesquelles ils se sont engages avec les appareils. Les resultats indiquent que tant les enfants du Koweit que des Etats-Unis utilisent beaucoup les appareils mobiles. Les enfants koweitiens semblent avoir plus d'acces et d'usage des appareils que les enfants etatsuniens. Les enfants etaient en mesure d'indiquer et decrire de nombreuses activites, par exemple repondre aux telephones portables, prendre des photos et des videos, jouer a des jeux, ecouter des chansons et regarder des videos. Cette recherche presente la perspective des enfants sur les appareils numeriques, mais attire egalement l'attention sur la responsabilite des parents et des educateurs de superviser l'utilisation des enfants et d'enseigner aux enfants la securite sur Internet quand ils utilisent ces appareils. ResumenEste estudio exploro el uso y la comprension de los ninos sobre los dispositivos moviles. El estudio incluyo 112 ninos de 3 a 5 anos de edad, de los cuales 53 vivian en Kuwait y 59 vivian en los Estados Unidos. Los ninos fueron entrevistados sobre su acceso y uso de dispositivos moviles, sobre como aprendieron a usarlos, y sobre las acciones y actividades en las que interactuaron con los dispositivos. Los hallazgos demostraron que tanto los ninos kuwaities como los ninos en los Estados Unidos usaban los dispositivos moviles extensivamente. Los ninos kuwaities parecian tener un mayor acceso y uso de dispositivos moviles en comparacion con sus contrapartes estadounidenses. Los ninos pudieron demostrar y describir muchas actividades en su uso, como contestar llamadas telefonicas, tomar fotos y grabar videos, jugar juegos, escuchar canciones y ver videos. La investigacion proporciona las perspectivas de los ninos sobre los dispositivos digitales, pero tambien llama la atencion sobre las responsabilidades de los padres y educadores a la hora de controlar el uso de dispositivos por los menores y ensenarlos acerca de la seguridad electronica que exige el uso de estos. C1 [Dashti, Fatimah A.] Kuwait Univ, Coll Educ, Dept Curriculum & Instruct, Alsuwais St,Block 6, Kaifan, Kuwait. [Yateem, Azizah K.] Publ Author Appl Educ, Dept Curriculum & Instruct, Basic Educ Coll, Rd 103, Al Ardiya, Kuwait. C3 Kuwait University; Public Authority for Applied Education & Training (PAAET) - Kuwait RP Dashti, FA (corresponding author), Kuwait Univ, Coll Educ, Dept Curriculum & Instruct, Alsuwais St,Block 6, Kaifan, Kuwait. EM ffdashti@yahoo.com CR An H., 2014, EXCHANGE, P65 [Anonymous], 2010, INV YOUNG CHILDR US Barone D., 2012, RES SCH, V19, P1 Bayles J. D. W., 2013, 10 LIB, P63 Beschorner B, 2013, INT J EDUC MATH SCI, V1, P16 Byron T., 2008, BYRON REV ACTION PLA Clark A, 2005, EARLY CHILD DEV CARE, V175, P489, DOI 10.1080/03004430500131288 Common Sense Media, 2013, ZERO 8 CHILDRENS MED Couse LJ, 2010, J RES TECHNOL EDUC, V43, P75, DOI 10.1080/15391523.2010.10782562 Geist EA., 2012, J INSTRUCT PSYCHOL, V39, P26 Gutnick A. L., 2011, ZERO 8 CHILDRENS MED Kabali HK, 2015, PEDIATRICS, V136, P1044, DOI 10.1542/peds.2015-2151 McPake J, 2013, BRIT J EDUC TECHNOL, V44, P421, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8535.2012.01323.x Michael Cohen Group, 2011, YOUNG CHILDR APPS IP Neumann MM, 2014, AUST J EDUC, V58, P109, DOI 10.1177/0004944114523368 Nielsen Company, 2012, AM FAM SEE TABL PLAY Pegrum M, 2013, AUSTRALAS J EDUC TEC, V29, P66 Plowman L, 2003, J COMPUT ASSIST LEAR, V19, P149, DOI 10.1046/j.0266-4909.2003.00016.x Plowman L, 2015, INTERACT COMPUT, V27, P36, DOI 10.1093/iwc/iwu031 NR 19 TC 5 Z9 5 U1 2 U2 11 PU SPRINGER PI DORDRECHT PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS SN 0020-7187 EI 1878-4658 J9 INT J EARLY CHILD JI Int. J. Early Child PD APR PY 2018 VL 50 IS 1 BP 121 EP 134 DI 10.1007/s13158-018-0208-x PG 14 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA VJ1MS UT WOS:000539385800008 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kanekar, A Sharma, M Atri, A AF Kanekar, Amar Sharma, Manoj Atri, Ashutosh TI 3 ENHANCING SOCIAL SUPPORT, HARDINESS, AND ACCULTURATION TO IMPROVE MENTAL HEALTH AMONG ASIAN INDIAN INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS SO INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY OF COMMUNITY HEALTH EDUCATION LA English DT Article AB International students, upon relocation to a foreign country, undergo a major life event which can cause distress that can potentially affect their mental health. This study pilot tested an internet-based intervention to enhance the social support, hardiness, and acculturation among students of Asian Indian origin at a large midwestern university. A pretest-posttest randomized design was employed. The pretest was administered to 60 students who were then randomly assigned to experimental and comparison groups. The experimental group was offered online instruction about social support, hardiness, and acculturation through Blackboard TM over 2 months. The comparison group received an equivalent protocol based on general wellness. Repeated measures ANOVA was done which showed significant improvement in mental health variable (F(1, 37) = 4.768, p < 0.05). Recommendations for replicating such interventions in other groups of international students are presented. C1 [Kanekar, Amar; Sharma, Manoj] Univ Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA. [Atri, Ashutosh] Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr Houston, Houston, TX 77030 USA. C3 University System of Ohio; University of Cincinnati; University of Texas System; University of Texas Health Science Center Houston RP Sharma, M (corresponding author), Univ Cincinnati, Hlth Promot & Educ, POB 210068, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA. EM manoj.sharma@uc.edu RI Kanekar, Amar Shireesh/B-1782-2012; Sharma, Manoj/AAN-6133-2020 OI Kanekar, Amar Shireesh/0000-0001-8630-183X; Sharma, Manoj/0000-0002-4624-2414 CR Ahmed S M, 2000, J Immigr Health, V2, P89, DOI 10.1023/A:1009585918590 Atri A, 2007, INT Q COMMUNITY HEAL, V27, P59, DOI 10.2190/IQ.27.1.e BARRINGER F, 1991, NY TIMES 0612, pA9 BARRINGER F, 1991, NY TIMES 0612, pA1 Berry JW, 1997, APPL PSYCHOL-INT REV, V46, P5, DOI 10.1111/j.1464-0597.1997.tb01087.x Bhugra D, 2005, ACTA PSYCHIAT SCAND, V111, P84, DOI 10.1111/j.1600-0447.2004.00454.x Chiu W., 1998, PROFESSIONAL PSYCHOL, V29, P444 CHUNG RCY, 1993, SOC SCI MED, V36, P631, DOI 10.1016/0277-9536(93)90060-H COCHRANE R, 1987, SOC PSYCHIATR, V22, P181, DOI 10.1007/BF00583553 COHEN S, 1983, J APPL SOC PSYCHOL, V13, P99, DOI 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1983.tb02325.x Cohen S, 2004, AM PSYCHOL, V59, P676, DOI 10.1037/0003-066X.59.8.676 Constantine Madonna G, 2005, Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol, V11, P162, DOI 10.1037/1099-9809.11.2.162 HO MK, 1992, WORKING CULTURE PSYC, P182 Kawachi I, 2001, J URBAN HEALTH, V78, P458, DOI 10.1093/jurban/78.3.458 Kessler RC, 2003, ARCH GEN PSYCHIAT, V60, P184, DOI 10.1001/archpsyc.60.2.184 Kessler RC, 2002, PSYCHOL MED, V32, P959, DOI 10.1017/S0033291702006074 Khavarpour F, 1997, AUST NZ J PSYCHIAT, V31, P828, DOI 10.3109/00048679709065508 Noh S, 1996, J HEALTH SOC BEHAV, V37, P192, DOI 10.2307/2137273 Odegard O., 1932, EMIGRATION INSANITY Romas J. 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PD APR PY 2010 VL 30 IS 1 BP 55 EP 68 DI 10.2190/IQ.30.1.e PG 14 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA V3C6S UT WOS:000218134900005 PM 20353927 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Cappellini, B Yen, DAW AF Cappellini, Benedetta Yen, Dorothy Ai-wan TI A space of one's own: spatial and identity liminality in an online community of mothers SO JOURNAL OF MARKETING MANAGEMENT LA English DT Article DE Liminality; mothering; acculturation; online community; ethnography; nethnography ID MARKETING-RESEARCH; CONSUMER RESEARCH; THRESHOLD SELVES; CONSUMPTION; INTERNET; NEGOTIATION; PERSPECTIVE; EMPOWERMENT; TRANSITION AB This paper investigates the role of an online community in the life of 11 Taiwanese women living in the UK and considers the implications this empirical case has for theorising about motherhood and the spatial dimensions of online/on-site space. Findings from a nethnographic and ethnographic fieldwork show how online discussions reflect and amplify the liminal identities of the community's members. In looking at doing mothering at a collective rather than at the individual level, this study highlights how collective practices of consumption perpetuate liminal identities, exacerbating consumers' sense of being out of place. It shows how online space is at the same time the product of online and on-site liminal identities and liminal social interactions and the re-producer of such interactions. C1 [Cappellini, Benedetta] Royal Holloway Univ London, Sch Management, Egham Hill, Egham TW20 0EX, Surrey, England. [Yen, Dorothy Ai-wan] Brunel Univ, Brunel Business Sch, London, England. C3 University of London; Royal Holloway University London; Brunel University RP Cappellini, B (corresponding author), Royal Holloway Univ London, Sch Management, Egham Hill, Egham TW20 0EX, Surrey, England. EM Benedetta.Cappellini@rhul.ac.uk OI Yen, Dorothy/0000-0003-1129-9653; Cappellini, Benedetta/0000-0002-4433-4710 CR [Anonymous], 2006, INTERPRETING QUALITA [Anonymous], DIGITAL DIVIDE [Anonymous], 2014, PARENTING CULTURE ST [Anonymous], WOMENS STUDIES COMMU, DOI DOI 10.1080/07491409.2001.10162435 [Anonymous], TIME TRIBES DECLINE [Anonymous], 1979, PROCESS PERFORMANCE [Anonymous], 2001, INTERNET ETHNOGRAPHI [Anonymous], 2011, NETWORKED SELF IDENT, DOI DOI 10.4324/9780203876527 Askegaard S, 2005, J CONSUM RES, V32, P160, DOI 10.1086/426625 Banister E., 2008, EUROPEAN ADV CONSUME, V33, P343 Berry JW, 1997, APPL PSYCHOL-INT REV, V46, P5, DOI 10.1111/j.1464-0597.1997.tb01087.x Breitsohl J, 2015, J MARKET MANAG-UK, V31, P1040, DOI 10.1080/0267257X.2015.1036102 Cappellini B., 2013, IDENTITY CONSUMPTION, P119 Chen M. 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Market. Manag. PY 2016 VL 32 IS 13-14 BP 1260 EP 1283 DI 10.1080/0267257X.2016.1156725 PG 24 WC Business; Management WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA DX5HP UT WOS:000384411600003 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Usborne, E Taylor, DM AF Usborne, Esther Taylor, Donald M. TI Using Computer-Mediated Communication as a Tool for Exploring the Impact of Cultural Identity Clarity on Psychological Well-Being SO BASIC AND APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article ID SELF-CONCEPT CLARITY; ACCULTURATION; UNCERTAINTY; INTEGRATION; INTERNET; ONESELF; ESTEEM AB Recent theory and research have pointed to the importance of cultural identity clarity for psychological well-being (e. g., Taylor, 2002; Usborne & Taylor, 2010). The present research is an initial attempt to manipulate cultural identity clarity in a laboratory setting and examine its impact on state psychological well-being. In a laboratory experiment, participants were led to experience a clear or an unclear cultural identity during a computer-mediated interaction. For participants who highly identified with their cultural group, negotiating a computer-mediated social interaction with a clear cultural identity led to the highest levels of well-being compared to negotiating this interaction with an unclear cultural identity. Feelings of personal uncertainty were explored as a mechanism explaining the relationship between cultural identity clarity and well-being. C1 [Taylor, Donald M.] McGill Univ, Dept Psychol, Montreal, PQ H3C 1B1, Canada. [Usborne, Esther] Univ Montreal, Montreal, PQ H3C 3J7, Canada. C3 McGill University; Universite de Montreal RP Taylor, DM (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Psychol, 1205 Docteur Penfield Ave, Montreal, PQ H3C 1B1, Canada. 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Psychol. PY 2012 VL 34 IS 2 BP 183 EP 191 DI 10.1080/01973533.2012.655636 PG 9 WC Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 936EE UT WOS:000303572900009 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Trebbe, J AF Trebbe, Joachim TI Types of Integration, Acculturation Strategies and Media Use of Young Turks in Germany SO COMMUNICATIONS-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE integration; media use; Turks; Germany; types of integration; acculturation strategies AB Although most Turks in Germany belong to the second or third generation of immigrants, they have retained the social, cultural, and religious identity of their country of origin. This article deals with this double identity of young Turks in Germany and their language-bound exposure to television, radio, press, and the Internet. Telephone survey data are presented regarding the integration and media use of Turks in Germany. The survey was carried out in 2006 on behalf of the public broadcasting station of North Rhine-Westphalia (Westdeutscher Rundfunk, WDR). The analyses identify and describe different types of integration of Turks and investigate the relationship between their level of integration and their demographic profile as well as their patterns of media use. Causal analysis was focused on the question how different strategies of acculturation influence the use of mass media. C1 Univ Fribourg, Dept Social Sci, CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland. C3 University of Fribourg RP Trebbe, J (corresponding author), Univ Fribourg, Dept Social Sci, CH-1700 Fribourg, Switzerland. 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K., 2000, FERNSEHFOSCHUNG AB 2, V2000, P2 Nieland J.-U., 2000, MIGRANTEN MEDIEN NEU, P272 Pottker Horst., 2005, MASSENMEDIEN INTEGRA, P25 Rubin A.M., 2002, MEDIA EFFECTS ADV TH, P525, DOI DOI 10.4324/9780429491146 SACKMANN R, 2004, ZUWANDERUNG INTEGRAT Schneider B., 2006, INTEGRATION DURCH MA, P93 Simon E., 2006, ZWISCHEN KULTUREN FE, P16 Trebbe J., 2003, CHANCEN GEFAHREN MED, P417 Trebbe J., 2001, NORD SUD AKTUELL, V15, P633 Trebbe J., 2006, ZWISCHEN KULTUREN FE, P32 Vlasic A., 2004, INTEGRATIONSFUNKTION Weiss H.-J., 2001, MEDIENNUTZUNG TURKIS Weiss H.-J., 2002, MEDIENGHETTO NUTZEN, V2002, P11 Weiss H.-J., 2002, INTEGRATION DURCH PO, P45 Windgasse T., 2006, ZWICHEN KULTUREN FER, P56 Zentrum air hrkeistudien, 1997, KURZF STUD MED TURK Zentrum fur Turkeistudien, 1996, MEDIENK TURK BEV DEU NR 38 TC 13 Z9 13 U1 1 U2 17 PU MOUTON DE GRUYTER PI BERLIN PA GENTHINER STRASSE 13, 10785 BERLIN, GERMANY SN 0341-2059 J9 COMMUNICATIONS-GER JI Communications PD JUN PY 2007 VL 32 IS 2 SI SI BP 171 EP 191 DI 10.1515/COMMUN.2007.011 PG 21 WC Communication WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication GA V27KK UT WOS:000208611900003 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Son, J AF Son, Juyeon TI Immigrant Incorporation, Technology, and Transnationalism Among Korean American Women SO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND INTEGRATION LA English DT Article DE Immigration; Transnationalism; Korean immigrants; Acculturation; United States ID ASSIMILATION; ACCULTURATION AB The premise of the inevitable incorporation of the newcomers through assimilation is widely accepted among those who study immigrant incorporation, even though ample evidence suggests this premise may be inappropriate to explain the growing complexity of immigrant adaptation processes in an increasingly connected global society. Using focus group data of Korean American women, this study explores how immigrant incorporation patterns may be associated with the use of the Internet for fulfilling social needs and the implications that the findings have in terms of the effect of technology on immigrant incorporation. The results indicate that contemporary Korean American adaptation patterns may be at variance with the conventional expectations of immigrant assimilation. This appears to be an effect of the expanding availability of interactive technology as it facilitates the increasing cultural and social transnational activities that connect immigrants to their country of origin. C1 Univ Wisconsin, 800 Algoma Blvd, Oshkosh, WI 54901 USA. C3 University of Wisconsin System RP Son, J (corresponding author), Univ Wisconsin, 800 Algoma Blvd, Oshkosh, WI 54901 USA. 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PD MAY PY 2015 VL 16 IS 2 BP 377 EP 395 DI 10.1007/s12134-014-0347-3 PG 19 WC Demography WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Demography GA CJ7QK UT WOS:000355692500011 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT S AU Razek, N AF Razek, Nasser BA Velliaris, DM BF Velliaris, DM TI Academic Integrity and International Students: Culture, Challenges, and Learning Habits SO HANDBOOK OF RESEARCH ON ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT IN HIGHER EDUCATION SE Advances in Higher Education and Professional Development Book Series LA English DT Article; Book Chapter ID SOUTH ASIAN-AMERICANS; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; DISHONESTY; ACCULTURATION; IDENTITY; CHEAT AB The pressure to excel, peer perceptions, and the lack of faculty enforcement are among several factors that lead students to cheat in general. When circumstances of Academic Integrity (AI) among international students were examined, findings revealed prevalence of academic misconduct behaviors due to several factors. When admitting several academic dishonesty behaviors as accepted practices, a sweeping majority of international students denounced cheating as opposed to their own cultural, ethical, and religious beliefs. Several forms of academic misconduct behaviors are more frequent among international students than others. These included unauthorized help, cheating on online tests and utilizing Internet paper mills. Suggested strategies for minimizing misconduct practices of international students included: orientation training, a focus on learning outcomes, alleviating the social pressure, raising students' awareness about academic expectations, and building on the students' ethical backgrounds. C1 [Razek, Nasser] Univ Akron, Higher Educ Adm Program, Akron, OH 44325 USA. C3 University System of Ohio; University of Akron RP Razek, N (corresponding author), Univ Akron, Higher Educ Adm Program, Akron, OH 44325 USA. 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TI New directions in researching ethnicity in marketing and consumer behaviour: A well-being agenda SO MARKETING THEORY LA English DT Article DE Conflict; ethnicity; mobility; place; power relations; religion; shifting identities; the Internet; transformation; well-being ID ETHNOCENTRISM; ACCULTURATION; CONSUMPTION AB This special commentary section proposes new directions in researching the nexus of ethnicity and well-being under three themes of (1) mobility and shifting identities in relation to place, (2) empowerment and identity performance in relation to the virtual space, and (3) religious conflicts in relation to markets and spaces of consumption. The three short essays in this collection are geared towards accelerating research on ethnicity in marketing and consumer behaviour. They problematize the very nature of ethnicity in relation to space and how ethnicity is performed in different spaces by looking at the issues of social relations, transformations and conflict. They suggest potential areas of enquiry, particularly for new (doctor of philosophy) research projects, policy-focused research grant applications, conferences/seminars/workshops and also classroom activities and teaching purposes. C1 [Jafari, Aliakbar] Univ Strathclyde, Dept Mkt, Glasgow G4 0GE, Lanark, Scotland. [Visconti, Luca M.] ESCP Europe, F-75011 Paris, France. C3 University of Strathclyde; heSam Universite; ESCP Business School RP Jafari, A (corresponding author), Univ Strathclyde, Dept Mkt, Sir William Duncan Bldg,130 Rottenrow St, Glasgow G4 0GE, Lanark, Scotland. 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M., ROUTLEDGE C IN PRESS Visconti LM, 2014, J MARKET MANAG-UK, V30, P1882, DOI 10.1080/0267257X.2014.951384 Warde A., 2005, J CONSUM CULT, V5, P131, DOI DOI 10.1177/1469540505053090 Weber M., 1978, EC SOC OUTLINE INTER Zolfagharian M, 2014, J CONSUM MARK, V31, P68, DOI 10.1108/JCM-06-2013-0620 NR 38 TC 12 Z9 12 U1 1 U2 30 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 1470-5931 EI 1741-301X J9 MARKETING THEOR JI Mark. Theory PD JUN PY 2015 VL 15 IS 2 BP 265 EP 270 DI 10.1177/1470593114552582 PG 6 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA CI8AH UT WOS:000354989100007 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lopez, JM Tram, JM AF Lopez, Jacquelene M. Tram, Jane M. TI Falling Behind and Forgotten: The Impact of Acculturation and Spirituality on the Mental Health Help-Seeking Behavior of Filipinos in the USA SO ASIAN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE acculturation; Indigenous; Filipino; spirituality; mental health ID AMERICAN IMMIGRANTS; ASIAN-AMERICANS; DISCRIMINATION; SERVICES; PHILIPPINES; MIGRATION; ATTITUDES; ALCOHOL; CONTEXT; MODEL AB Cultural factors must be considered in the study of Filipinos in the USA. More specifically, Indigenous Filipino culture, which forms the basis of the study of Sikolohiyang Pilipino, is important as it incorporates the spiritual beliefs and practices that continue to influence Filipinos' conceptualization of illness and healing. Given the low mental health utilization rates of Filipino Americans, it is important to examine whether Indigenous Filipino Spirituality (IFS) may impact mental health help-seeking behaviors (MHSB). In addition to spirituality, history is another important cultural factor. The Philippines' nearly 50-year American colonial rule contributed to a unique acculturation experience for Filipinos and a complex and confusing ethnic and cultural identity. Our study examined the impact of acculturation and value for integrating IFS into mental health treatment on MHSB. Recruitment and dissemination of the study questionnaire were conducted via email and social media platforms (i.e., Reddit, Facebook). In the sample of 294 Filipinos across 40 states, 96.1% (n = 268) reported as belonging to a Filipino ethnic group and 8.4% (n = 22) identified with belonging to an Indigenous Filipino tribe. Our results revealed that higher acculturation and higher value of integrating IFS into mental health treatment are both associated with higher MHSB. These findings emphasize considerations for cultural factors in the psychological study and mental health treatment of Filipinos. Incorporating culturally relevant factors such as spirituality and history into healing and treatment promotes much needed access to a culturally adapted mental health support for Filipinos in the USA. What is the public significance of this article? This study suggests that higher acculturation and higher value for integrating Indigenous Filipino spirituality into mental health treatment are both associated with higher likeliness of seeking mental health support among Filipinos in the USA. Additionally, this study aims to promote cultural considerations and access toward a more culturally responsive mental health treatment for Filipinos. C1 [Lopez, Jacquelene M.; Tram, Jane M.] Pacific Univ, Grad Sch Psychol, 190 SE 8th,Suite 260, Hillsboro, OR 97123 USA. C3 Pacific University RP Tram, JM (corresponding author), Pacific Univ, Grad Sch Psychol, 190 SE 8th,Suite 260, Hillsboro, OR 97123 USA. 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PD JUN PY 2023 VL 14 IS 2 BP 218 EP 230 DI 10.1037/aap0000293 EA JUN 2022 PG 13 WC Ethnic Studies; Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Ethnic Studies; Psychology GA H4NM7 UT WOS:000811238500001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ravindran, N Myers, BJ AF Ravindran, Neeraja Myers, Barbara J. TI Beliefs and Practices Regarding Autism in Indian Families Now Settled Abroad: An Internet Survey SO FOCUS ON AUTISM AND OTHER DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES LA English DT Article DE autism spectrum disorders; culture; India; beliefs; treatments ID SPECTRUM DISORDER; CHILDREN; CULTURE; COMPLEMENTARY AB Beliefs and practices regarding autism were explored in Indian families living outside India. Parents (N = 24) of children (3 to 15 years) with an autism spectrum disorder wrote open-ended answers in an online questionnaire regarding their beliefs about causes, treatments and services received, use of and preference for Indian medicine and practices, and acculturation. Although two participants did not provide enough answers to be categorized, three groups of parents emerged: Those who were primarily Western (n = 4) in their beliefs and practices concerning autism, those who were primarily Indian (n = 4), and those who endorsed a combination of Western and Indian beliefs and practices (n = 14). Most parents acknowledged traditional beliefs and practices only when specifically asked and did not volunteer this information. Professionals need to avoid assuming there is a universal set of attitudes and practices related to autism when working with culturally diverse families. C1 [Ravindran, Neeraja; Myers, Barbara J.] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Richmond, VA 23284 USA. C3 Virginia Commonwealth University RP Ravindran, N (corresponding author), Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Psychol, POB 842018, Richmond, VA 23284 USA. 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D., 2000, NECESSARY BUT NOT SU Wallace KS, 2010, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V51, P1300, DOI 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2010.02308.x Wong HHL, 2006, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V36, P901, DOI 10.1007/s10803-006-0131-0 Wong VCN, 2009, J AUTISM DEV DISORD, V39, P454, DOI 10.1007/s10803-008-0644-9 NR 44 TC 18 Z9 18 U1 0 U2 17 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 1088-3576 EI 1538-4829 J9 FOCUS AUTISM DEV DIS JI Focus Autism Dev. Disabil. PD MAR PY 2013 VL 28 IS 1 BP 44 EP 53 DI 10.1177/1088357612458970 PG 10 WC Education, Special; Psychology, Developmental; Rehabilitation WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research; Psychology; Rehabilitation GA 087NU UT WOS:000314769400006 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Rademeyer, C Wagner, C Cassimjee, N AF Rademeyer, Cornel Wagner, Claire Cassimjee, Nafisa TI A SYSTEMIC STUDY OF SOUTH AFRICAN EMIGRANTS' EXPERIENCE OF THE CANADIAN ENVIRONMENT SO SOUTH AFRICAN GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL LA English DT Article DE emigrants; place attachment; systems theory; adaptation ID COPING STRATEGIES; PLACE ATTACHMENT; IMMIGRANTS; ACCULTURATION; ADAPTATION; STRESS; RESETTLEMENT; MIGRATION; IDENTITY; CONTEXT AB The aim of this study was to investigate the coupling between the immigrant and the new environment by focusing Oil South African emigrants in Canada's experience of the environment. Thus far, acculturation and adaptation research has excluded the physical environment as a study unit. This study focused on the immigrants' adaptation as a whole by Including the physical environment as a component of the acculturation and adaptation processes. Systems theory constituted a framework for studying the interactions between people, culture and the physical environment. Twenty-four interviews were conducted via the Internet. The first order analysis identified 36 categories of experience. The second order analysis identified mile pattern categories that constitute a shared experience. The third order analysis placed the immigrants' experience as a Whole in the context of interacting systems. In conclusion recommendations are made for interdisciplinary co-operation, further research and the practical implementation of migration research. C1 [Rademeyer, Cornel; Wagner, Claire; Cassimjee, Nafisa] Univ Pretoria, Dept Psychol, ZA-0181 Brooklyn, South Africa. C3 University of Pretoria RP Rademeyer, C (corresponding author), Univ Pretoria, Dept Psychol, Lynnwood Rd, ZA-0181 Brooklyn, South Africa. 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Afr. Geogr. J. PY 2009 VL 91 IS 2 BP 84 EP 93 DI 10.1080/03736245.2009.9725335 PG 10 WC Geography WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Geography GA 548QS UT WOS:000273981900004 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lin, P Simoni, JM Zemon, V AF Lin, P Simoni, JM Zemon, V TI The health belief model, sexual behaviors, and HIV risk among Taiwanese immigrants SO AIDS EDUCATION AND PREVENTION LA English DT Article ID PERCEIVED SELF-EFFICACY; ISLANDER AMERICAN MEN; WORLD-WIDE-WEB; PREVENTION; INTERNET; ACCULTURATION; DETERMINANTS; HIV/AIDS; WOMEN; US AB In this first investigation of Taiwanese sexual behaviors in the United States, 144 Taiwanese students completed an online anonymous survey. Demographics, health belief model (HBM) constructs, and acculturation were examined as predictors of sexual behaviors over the last year. Analyses indicated that participants who reported a higher number of sexual partners and more frequent sexual intercourse tended to be more educated and more likely to be nonheterosexual. The HBM constructs, as a set, reliably predicted participants' sexual behaviors. Self-efficacy was the strongest predictor within the HIM. Furthermore, acculturation moderated the predictive power of the HBM with respect to intercourse frequency. The main limitation of the study is that the measure of HBM, which was not designed to target Asian immigrants, was psychometrically poor. The results suggest self-efficacy is a target for behavioral change, acculturation may need to be incorporated into the HBM, and more culturally sensitive measures need to be developed. C1 Univ Washington, Dept Psychol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. Yeshiva Univ, Ferkauf Grad Sch Psychol, Bronx, NY USA. Columbia Univ, HIV Ctr Clin & Behav Studies, New York, NY USA. New York Psychiat Inst, New York, NY USA. C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; Yeshiva University; Columbia University; New York State Psychiatry Institute RP Simoni, JM (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Dept Psychol, Box 35125, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. 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PD OCT PY 2005 VL 17 IS 5 BP 469 EP 483 DI 10.1521/aeap.2005.17.5.469 PG 15 WC Education & Educational Research; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 977WS UT WOS:000232834800007 PM 16255642 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kemppainen, T Kemppainen, L Kuusio, H Rask, S Saukkonen, P AF Kemppainen, Teemu Kemppainen, Laura Kuusio, Hannamaria Rask, Shadia Saukkonen, Pasi TI Multifocal Integration and Marginalisation: A Theoretical Model and an Empirical Study on Three Immigrant Groups SO SOCIOLOGY-THE JOURNAL OF THE BRITISH SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION LA English DT Article DE belonging; immigration; integration; marginalisation; transnationalism ID WEAK TIES; ACCULTURATION; TRANSNATIONALISM; MIGRATION; IDENTIFICATION; SIMULTANEITY; ASSIMILATION; DIMENSIONS; DIVERSITY; PATTERNS AB Recent sociological discussions have examined the classic theme of social integration from the point of view of belonging and multiple solidarities. As a research topic, migration importantly elucidates these general sociological questions. Literature on migration, integration and transnationalism lacks an encompassing theoretical model, which limits our understanding of complex integration processes. We propose a multifocal model of migrant integration including three key foci of integration: the host society; transnational sphere; and co-ethnic community in the host society. Moreover, the model considers integration in terms of different dimensions. With this model, we define multifocal marginalisation and study Russian, Kurdish and Somali migrants in Finland. We find that the different foci do not compete with each other, but are in a moderate positive relationship. There are clear group differences in integration patterns. Determinants of multifocal marginalisation include Kurdish background, weak Internet skills and older age. Discussion themes include belonging and social change. C1 [Kemppainen, Teemu] Univ Helsinki, Urban Geog, Helsinki, Finland. [Kemppainen, Laura] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. [Saukkonen, Pasi] Univ Helsinki, Polit Sci, Helsinki, Finland. [Kemppainen, Teemu] ENS, EHESS, CNRS, Ctr Maurice Halbwachs, Paris, France. [Kuusio, Hannamaria; Rask, Shadia] Finnish Inst Hlth & Welf, Equal & Inclus Unit, Helsinki, Finland. [Saukkonen, Pasi] City Helsinki Execut Off, Urban Res & Stat, Helsinki, Finland. [Saukkonen, Pasi] Univ Jyvaskyla, Cultural Policy, Jyvaskyla, Finland. C3 University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); UDICE-French Research Universities; Universite PSL; Ecole Normale Superieure (ENS); University of Jyvaskyla RP Kemppainen, L (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Fac Social Sci, POB 54, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland. EM laura.kemppainen@helsinki.fi RI Kemppainen, Laura/AAZ-3907-2021; Kemppainen, Laura/GQH-7785-2022 OI Kemppainen, Laura/0000-0001-9320-2442; Kemppainen, Teemu/0000-0002-0450-4439 FU Academy of Finland [312310]; Strategic Research Council at the Academy of Finland [327145, 327148]; Kone Foundation; Helsinki Metropolitan Region Urban Research Program; City of Turku/West-Finland Housing Association of Public Utility; Academy of Finland (AKA) [312310, 327148, 327148, 312310] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA) FX The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article: the research was funded by the Academy of Finland (grant 312310 for the Centre of Excellence for Research on Ageing and Care, RG 3 Migration, Care and Ageing), the Strategic Research Council at the Academy of Finland (grant 327145 and 327148 for the DigiIn project), Kone Foundation (project Crossing Borders for Health and Well-Being), Helsinki Metropolitan Region Urban Research Program and the City of Turku/West-Finland Housing Association of Public Utility (Lansi-Suomen Yleishyodyllinen Asuntosaatio). 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Brit. Sociol. Assoc. PD AUG PY 2020 VL 54 IS 4 BP 782 EP 805 AR 0038038520904715 DI 10.1177/0038038520904715 EA MAR 2020 PG 24 WC Sociology WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Sociology GA MK2IX UT WOS:000523535300001 OA hybrid, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Hyvonen, H AF Hyvonen, Heli TI THE STRENGTH OF NATIVE TIES: SOCIAL NETWORKS OF FINNISH IMMIGRANTS IN ESTONIA SO TRAMES-JOURNAL OF THE HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES LA English DT Article DE immigration; cross-border contacts; acculturation strategies; weak ties; strong ties ID TRANSNATIONALISM AB This article, which is based on 24 in-depth interviews conducted in 2005 with Finnish immigrant women in Estonia, analyzes immigrant acculturation in relation to cross-border contacts. I compared weak and strong social ties of two groups: respondents who were living in a Finnish 'enclave' separated from Estonian society, and respondents who were socially and institutionally integrated into Estonian society. Surprisingly, there was no notable difference in the type and frequency of inter-personal contacts maintained with Finland between the two groups; most interviewees sustained intense inter-personal contacts with family and friends by phone, the Internet and through reciprocal visits. So-called weak ties that bind together rarely interacting people played a major role in the respondent's integration into the host society. Those women who had no social contacts within Estonian society preferred to use health-care and social welfare services in Finland, whereas the integrated women had established multiple institutional ties to Estonian society. C1 Univ Helsinki, Dept Social Policy, Fac Social Sci, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland. C3 University of Helsinki RP Hyvonen, H (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Dept Social Policy, Fac Social Sci, POB 18,Snellmaninkatu 10, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland. 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Humanit. Soc. Sci. PY 2008 VL 12 IS 4 BP 421 EP 440 DI 10.3176/tr.2008.4.04 PG 20 WC Humanities, Multidisciplinary; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) SC Arts & Humanities - Other Topics; Social Sciences - Other Topics GA 389OH UT WOS:000262103300004 OA Green Submitted, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Flores, BB Clark, ER Guerra, NS Casebeer, CM Sanchez, SV Mayall, HJ AF Flores, Belinda Bustos Clark, Ellen Riojas Guerra, Norma S. Casebeer, Cindy M. Sanchez, Serafin V. Mayall, Hayley J. TI Measuring the Psychosocial Characteristics of Teacher Candidates Through the Academic Self-Identity: Self-Observation Yearly (ASI SOY) Inventory SO HISPANIC JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES LA English DT Article DE teacher candidate efficacy; teacher candidate epistemological beliefs; teacher candidate identity; teacher candidate acculturation level; teacher development and preparation; teacher preparedness for diverse classroom ID EPISTEMOLOGICAL BELIEFS; ETHNIC-IDENTITY; EFFICACY BELIEFS; CONTENT VALIDITY; ACCULTURATION; MEXICAN; KNOWLEDGE; EDUCATION; INTERNET; SCHOOL AB This study contends that multiple psychosocial factors mediate students' pursuit of the teaching profession, including beliefs, ethnic identity, acculturation, efficacy, and motivation. Despite the myriad literature addressing teacher characteristics, less is known about how these factors influence the academic or personal development of teacher candidates preparing to teach in diverse classrooms. The authors examined the psychometric properties of the Academic Self-Identity: Self-Observation Yearly (ASI SOY), specifically developed to measure teacher candidates' psychosocial characteristics. A total of 670 ASI SOY inventories were collected from teacher candidates attending a Hispanic-serving institution. It was found that the ASI SOY is reliable and valid for measuring four out of five proposed constructs. ASI SOY may be useful in identifying the academic, personal, and professional development characteristics of teacher candidates. C1 [Flores, Belinda Bustos] Univ Texas San Antonio, Dept Interdisciplinary Learning & Teaching, San Antonio, TX 78249 USA. [Casebeer, Cindy M.] Univ Texas Pan Amer, Dept Educ Psychol, Edinburg, TX 78541 USA. [Mayall, Hayley J.] No Illinois Univ, De Kalb, IL 60115 USA. 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PD FEB PY 2010 VL 32 IS 1 BP 136 EP 163 DI 10.1177/0739986309353029 PG 28 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 548AT UT WOS:000273931900007 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Yoon, H Jang, YR Xie, B AF Yoon, Hyunwoo Jang, Yuri Xie, Bo TI Computer Use and Computer Anxiety in Older Korean Americans SO JOURNAL OF APPLIED GERONTOLOGY LA English DT Article DE computer use; computer anxiety; Korean American older adults ID INTERNET USE; ADULTS; HEALTH; ACCULTURATION AB Responding to the limited literature on computer use in ethnic minority older populations, the present study examined predictors of computer use and computer anxiety in older Korean Americans. Separate regression models were estimated for computer use and computer anxiety with the common sets of predictors: (a) demographic variables (age, gender, marital status, and education), (b) physical health indicators (chronic conditions, functional disability, and self-rated health), and (c) sociocultural factors (acculturation and attitudes toward aging). Approximately 60% of the participants were computer-users, and they had significantly lower levels of computer anxiety than non-users. A higher likelihood of computer use and lower levels of computer anxiety were commonly observed among individuals with younger age, male gender, advanced education, more positive ratings of health, and higher levels of acculturation. In addition, positive attitudes toward aging were found to reduce computer anxiety. Findings provide implications for developing computer training and education programs for the target population. C1 [Yoon, Hyunwoo; Jang, Yuri] Univ Texas Austin, Sch Social Work, Austin, TX 78712 USA. [Jang, Yuri] Univ Texas Austin, Populat Res Ctr, Austin, TX 78712 USA. [Xie, Bo] Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, Austin, TX 78712 USA. [Xie, Bo] Univ Texas Austin, Sch Informat, Austin, TX 78712 USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin RP Yoon, H (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, 1925 San Jacinto Blvd,D 3500, Austin, TX 78712 USA. EM yoon1231@utexas.edu RI Yoon, Hyunwoo/ABF-4919-2020 FU St. David's Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research (CHPR) Pilot Grant Program [30-2142-4351] FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the St. David's Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research (CHPR) Pilot Grant Program (#30-2142-4351, PI-Yuri Jang, PhD). CR BERRY JW, 2002, ACCULTURATION ADV TH, P17 Chen YW, 2002, EDUC GERONTOL, V28, P731, DOI 10.1080/03601270290099921 Choi NG, 2013, J MED INTERNET RES, V15, DOI 10.2196/jmir.2333 Czaja SJ, 2006, PSYCHOL AGING, V21, P333, DOI 10.1037/0882-7974.21.2.333 Fillenbaum G., 1988, MULTIDIMENSIONAL FUN Gracia E, 2009, J MED INTERNET RES, V11, DOI 10.2196/jmir.1311 Jang Y, 2004, J AGING STUD, V18, P485, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2004.06.001 Jang Y, 2007, J AGING STUD, V21, P267, DOI 10.1016/j.jaging.2006.10.004 Laken MA, 2004, TELEMED J E-HEALTH, V10, P304, DOI 10.1089/tmj.2004.10.304 LAWTON MP, 1975, J GERONTOL, V30, P85, DOI 10.1093/geronj/30.1.85 Levy BR, 2002, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V83, P261, DOI 10.1037//0022-3514.83.2.261 LOYD BH, 1984, EDUC PSYCHOL MEAS, V44, P501, DOI 10.1177/0013164484442033 Pew Research Internet Project, 2011, AM LIV DIS THEIR TEC Pew Research Internet Project, 2014, OLDER ADULTS TECHNOL Suinn RM, 2010, ASIAN AM J PSYCHOL, V1, P5, DOI 10.1037/a0018798 Sum S, 2008, CYBERPSYCHOL BEHAV, V11, P208, DOI 10.1089/cpb.2007.0010 Wagner N, 2010, COMPUT HUM BEHAV, V26, P870, DOI 10.1016/j.chb.2010.03.029 Werner JM, 2011, HUM FACTORS, V53, P431, DOI 10.1177/0018720811420840 Wong CKM, 2014, J APPL GERONTOL, V33, P316, DOI 10.1177/0733464812463430 Xie B, 2012, LIBR INFORM SCI RES, V34, P63, DOI 10.1016/j.lisr.2011.07.006 Xie B, 2009, LIBR INFORM SCI RES, V31, P155, DOI 10.1016/j.lisr.2009.03.004 NR 21 TC 15 Z9 15 U1 3 U2 25 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 0733-4648 EI 1552-4523 J9 J APPL GERONTOL JI J. Appl. Gerontol. PD SEP PY 2016 VL 35 IS 9 BP 1000 EP 1010 DI 10.1177/0733464815570665 PG 11 WC Gerontology WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Geriatrics & Gerontology GA DU9NM UT WOS:000382544600005 PM 25698717 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Gordon, NP Iribarren, C AF Gordon, Nancy P. Iribarren, Carlos TI Health-related characteristics and preferred methods of receiving health education according to dominant language among Latinos Aged 25 to 64 in a large Northern California health plan SO BMC PUBLIC HEALTH LA English DT Article ID ACCULTURATION; BEHAVIORS; OVERWEIGHT; OBESITY; ADULTS AB Background: Latinos are a fast growing segment of the U. S. health care population. Acculturation factors, including English fluency, result in an ethnic group heterogeneous with regard to SES, health practices, and health education needs. This study examined how demographic and health-related characteristics of Spanish-dominant (SD), Bilingual (BIL), and English-dominant (ED) Latino men and women aged 25-64 differed among members of a large Northern California health plan. Methods: This observational study was based on data from cohorts of 171 SD (requiring an interpreter), 181 BIL, and 734 ED Latinos aged 25-64 who responded to random sample health plan member surveys conducted 2005-2006. Language groups were compared separately by gender on education, income, behavioral health risks (smoking, obesity, exercise frequency, dietary practices, health beliefs), health status (overall health and emotional health, diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, heartburn/acid reflux, back pain, depression), computer and Internet access, and health education modality preferences. Results: Compared with ED Latinos, higher percentages of the SD and BIL groups had very low educational attainment and low income. While groups were similar in prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, and high cholesterol, SD were less likely than ED Latinos to rate overall health and emotional well-being as good, very good, or excellent and more likely to report heartburn and back pain (women only). The groups were similar with regard to smoking and obesity, but among women, SD were more likely to be physically inactive than ED, and BIL were less likely than SD and ED groups to eat <3 servings of fruit/vegetables per day. SD and BIL of both genders were significantly less likely than ED Latinos to believe that health practices had a large impact on health. Compared to ED men and women, SD and BIL Latinos had significantly lower Internet and computer access. As a result, SD Latinos had a greater preference for lower technology health education modalities such as videos and taped phone messages. Conclusion: There are important differences among Latinos of different English language proficiency with regard to education, income, health status, health behaviors, IT access, and health education modality preferences that ought to be considered when planning and implementing health programs for this growing segment of the U. S. population. C1 [Gordon, Nancy P.; Iribarren, Carlos] Kaiser Permanente Med Care Program, Div Res, Oakland, CA 94612 USA. C3 Kaiser Permanente RP Gordon, NP (corresponding author), Kaiser Permanente Med Care Program, Div Res, 2000 Broadway, Oakland, CA 94612 USA. EM nancy.gordon@kp.org; carlos.iribarren@kp.org FU Kaiser Permanente Northern California Region's Community Benefit Program FX This research was funded by Kaiser Permanente Northern California Region's Community Benefit Program. The authors acknowledge the dedicated work of the Member Health Survey research team and the Health Plan member survey participants who made this study possible. 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Thus, the goal of this study is to explore how relationships within the elderly immigrant's family are manifested in a home computer context and to determine the roles that domestication of the relevant technologies plays in their family life. This qualitative study is based on in-depth interviews with 26 elderly users who immigrated from the Former Soviet Union (FSU) to Israel about 20 years ago. The findings show that ICT domestication and family dynamics are complex, interrelated processes: Technologies have dramatically changed the elderly immigrants' family situations, yet immigrants have accorded these technologies unique meaning, adapting them to respond to their family needs and negotiating ICT domestication as a means of discussing and rebuilding family communication. C1 [Khvorostianov, Natalia] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Dept Commun Studies, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel. 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Fam. Commun. PY 2016 VL 16 IS 4 BP 355 EP 368 DI 10.1080/15267431.2016.1211131 PG 14 WC Communication WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Communication GA DX8SD UT WOS:000384658600005 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Vyas, AN Chaudhary, N Ramiah, K Landry, M AF Vyas, Amita N. Chaudhary, Nitasha Ramiah, Kalpana Landry, Megan TI Addressing a Growing Community's Health Needs: Project SAHNA (South Asian Health Needs Assessment) SO JOURNAL OF IMMIGRANT AND MINORITY HEALTH LA English DT Article DE South Asians; Asian-Indian; Health needs; Health information and perceptions ID RISK AB Limited data and research is available on the health issues faced by the South Asian population, especially for those living in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. Online and in-person surveys were administered to a convenience sample (n = 709) of South Asians living in the metropolitan Washington DC region. The survey gathered information on socio-demographics and acculturation; health care access and utilization; sources of health information; perceptions of community health; physical activity and smoking. While over 70 % of participants had a routine physical exam in the last 12 months, foreign born and less acculturated adults were less likely to have had a routine visit in the last 12 months. Internet (76.9 %) and physicians (76.1 %) are key sources of health information for South Asians. Only 29 % of South Asians are engaging in the recommended amount of physical activity per week. The results of this study provide guidance for future work in addressing the health and well-being of South Asian communities in the United States. C1 [Vyas, Amita N.; Landry, Megan] George Washington Univ, Dept Prevent & Community Hlth, Washington, DC 20037 USA. [Chaudhary, Nitasha] George Washington Univ, Washington, DC 20037 USA. [Ramiah, Kalpana] Amer Inst Res, Washington, DC USA. 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Immigr. Minor. Health PD JUN PY 2013 VL 15 IS 3 BP 577 EP 583 DI 10.1007/s10903-012-9655-x PG 7 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 175OQ UT WOS:000321240400016 PM 22684910 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Eylem, O van Straten, A de Wit, L Rathod, S Bhui, K Kerkhof, AJFM AF Eylem, Ozlem van Straten, Annemieke de Wit, Leonore Rathod, Shanaya Bhui, Kamaldeep Kerkhof, Ad J. F. M. TI Reducing suicidal ideation among Turkish migrants in the Netherlands and in the UK: the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial of a guided online intervention SO PILOT AND FEASIBILITY STUDIES LA English DT Article DE e-mental health; Cultural adaptation; Suicidal ideation; Turkish migrants; Feasibility; RCT ID BORDERLINE PERSONALITY-DISORDER; MENTALIZATION-BASED TREATMENT; MENTAL-HEALTH; RISK-FACTORS; SELF-HARM; DEPRESSION; ACCULTURATION; QUESTIONNAIRE; ADOLESCENTS; ADAPTATION AB Background: The evidence for the effectiveness of e-mental health interventions among ethnic minorities is still preliminary. This mixed methods study investigates the feasibility of a culturally adapted, guided online intervention with the intention to understand how it works and for whom to inform refinement. It also examines its likely effectiveness in reducing suicidal ideation when compared with the treatment as usual. Methods: Turkish migrants with mild to moderate suicidal thoughts were recruited from the general population using social media and newspaper advertisements. The intervention group obtained direct access to a 6-week guided online intervention while participants in the waiting list condition had to wait for 6 weeks. The intervention is based on an existing online intervention and was culturally adapted. Participants in both conditions completed baseline, post-test, and follow-up questionnaires on suicidal ideation (primary outcome), depression, worrying, hopelessness, suicide attempt and self-harm, acculturation, quality of life, and usability. In addition, participants were interviewed to examine the feasibility and mechanisms of action in more depth. The responses were analysed by inductive thematic analysis. Results: Eighty-five people signed up via the study website, and we included 18 (10 intervention, 8 waitlist control). While the therapeutic benefits were emphasised (e.g. feeling connected with the intervention), the feasibility was judged to be low. The main reasons given were not having severe suicidal thoughts and not being represented by the culturally adapted intervention. No suicide attempts were recorded during the study. The suicidal ideation, depression, and hopelessness scores were improved in both groups. Conclusion: Although intended to be a definitive trial, the current study became a feasibility study with process evaluation to understand the components and how they operate. The online intervention was not superior to the control condition. Future studies need to attend the implementation issues raised including measures of stigma, acculturation, and careful cultural adaptations alongside more attention to coaching and relational support. They should also consider how to improve engagement alongside selection of those who are motivated to use online interventions and offer alternatives for those who are not. C1 [Eylem, Ozlem; van Straten, Annemieke; de Wit, Leonore; Kerkhof, Ad J. F. M.] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Clin Psychol, 7 Van der Boechorststr, NL-1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Eylem, Ozlem; van Straten, Annemieke; de Wit, Leonore; Kerkhof, Ad J. F. M.] Amsterdam Inst Publ Hlth, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Eylem, Ozlem; Bhui, Kamaldeep] Wolfson Inst Prevent Med, Ctr Psychiat, Charterhouse Sq, London EC1M 6BQ, England. [Rathod, Shanaya] Southern Hlth NHS Fdn Trust, Southampton, Hants, England. [Bhui, Kamaldeep] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Primary Care Hlth Sci, Oxford, England. C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; University of London; Queen Mary University London; University of Oxford RP Eylem, O (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Clin Psychol, 7 Van der Boechorststr, NL-1081 BT Amsterdam, Netherlands.; Eylem, O (corresponding author), Amsterdam Inst Publ Hlth, Amsterdam, Netherlands.; Eylem, O (corresponding author), Wolfson Inst Prevent Med, Ctr Psychiat, Charterhouse Sq, London EC1M 6BQ, England. EM o.eylem@vu.nl RI van Straten, Annemieke/P-8495-2019; Bhui, Kamaldeep/AAX-2576-2020 OI van Straten, Annemieke/0000-0001-6875-2215; Bhui, Kamaldeep/0000-0002-9205-2144; Eylem-van Bergeijk, Ozlem/0000-0002-5695-9523; de wit, Leonore/0000-0002-2745-3806 FU European Commission [2013/330 -460] FX The study was funded by a personal grant from the European Commission (2013/330 -460). 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This mixed methods study examines access to, use of, and perspectives of digital and traditional media in Thailand, a middle-income nation undergoing rapid technological change. Eighty participants, evenly divided by ecological context (rural, urban) and generational cohort (adolescent, parent), participated in this interview study. Quantitative analyses reveal ecological gaps in media access and use, and generational gaps in media use and perceived importance of media. Qualitative analyses reveal how perceived opportunities and challenges of media are customized by ecological context and generational cohort. Centering the experiences and perspectives of Thais in diverse communities and of diverse ages, this study highlights both within-nation heterogeneity and homogeneity in media integration and psychological orientations toward media. In so doing, it draws attention to how culture shapes media use and perspectives. 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PD 2023 JUN 29 PY 2023 DI 10.1080/15213269.2023.2222533 EA JUN 2023 PG 29 WC Communication; Film, Radio, Television; Psychology, Applied WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) SC Communication; Film, Radio & Television; Psychology GA K4CS5 UT WOS:001015939500001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Bacigalupe, G Lambe, S AF Bacigalupe, Gonzalo Lambe, Susan TI Virtualizing Intimacy: Information Communication Technologies and Transnational Families in Therapy SO FAMILY PROCESS LA English DT Article DE Immigration; Families; Transnational; Information Communication Technologies ID INTERNET ADDICTION; CYBERSEX; ACCULTURATION; INTERVENTION; ADOLESCENTS; PREVALENCE; COMMUNITY; MARRIAGE; SUPPORT; MODEL AB Information communication technologies (ICTs) are a ubiquitous feature of immigrant family life. Affordable, widely accessible, and highly adaptable ICTs have transformed the immigrant experience into a transnational process with family networks redesigned but not lost. Being a transnational family is not a new phenomenon. Transnationalism, however, has historically been reserved for the wealthier professional and political immigrant class who were able to freely travel and use expensive forms of communication before the emergence of accessible technologies. This paper systematically reviews the research literature to investigate the potential impact of ICTs on the lives of transnational families and how these families utilize them. The wide penetration of ICTs also puts into question some of the ways in which scholars have conceptualized the immigrant experience. The appropriate use of technology in family therapy should strengthen culturally competent and equity-based approaches to address the needs of these families. A family therapy with a transnational family illuminates some of the potential that these technologies introduce in the practice of relational clinicians. C1 [Bacigalupe, Gonzalo] Univ Deusto, PETRA, IKERBASQUE, Basque Fdn Sci, Bilbao 448007, Spain. [Bacigalupe, Gonzalo] Univ Deusto, Dept Evaluat & Psychol Treatment, Bilbao 448007, Spain. [Lambe, Susan] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Clin Psychol, Boston, MA 02125 USA. C3 Basque Foundation for Science; University of Deusto; University of Deusto; University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Boston RP Bacigalupe, G (corresponding author), Univ Deusto, PETRA, IKERBASQUE, Basque Fdn Sci, Avda Univ 24, Bilbao 448007, Spain. 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Process PD MAR PY 2011 VL 50 IS 1 BP 12 EP 26 DI 10.1111/j.1545-5300.2010.01343.x PG 15 WC Psychology, Clinical; Family Studies WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Family Studies GA 728DT UT WOS:000287855100003 PM 21361921 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lacka, E Yip, NKT AF Lacka, Ewelina Yip, Nick K. T. TI Revealing the effect of acculturation process on e-commerce acceptance: The case of intra-European acculturation SO INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT & DATA SYSTEMS LA English DT Article DE Culture; Technology acceptance; E-commerce; Europe; Acculturation ID INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; CONSUMER ACCULTURATION; CULTURAL-VALUES; MODERATING ROLE; ONLINE; INTERNET; ADOPTION; CONSUMPTION; IMMIGRANTS; HISPANICS AB Purpose The popularity of e-commerce has increased significantly over recent years. However, this growth is not shared by all European Union states. One reason for this discrepancy is culture which impacts on e-commerce acceptance. The purpose of this paper is to reveal the effect of acculturation process on e-commerce acceptance. Design/methodology/approach Structural equation modelling is employed to test three research models: technology acceptance model, theory of planned behaviour model and motivational model. Findings The findings show that attitudes towards e-commerce change in relation to the perception of control and the influence of subjective norms, which impact intentions to use e-commerce before movement to a host country's culture. However, its effect diminishes after the exposure to the influence of a host culture. Originality/value This is the first study to demonstrate the existence of the effect of acculturation process on mingling and migrating consumers and their changing attitudes towards e-commerce acceptance. C1 [Lacka, Ewelina] Univ Glasgow, Adam Smith Business Sch, Coll Social Sci, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland. [Yip, Nick K. 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Manage. Data Syst. PY 2018 VL 118 IS 6 BP 1251 EP 1265 DI 10.1108/IMDS-11-2017-0509 PG 15 WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Engineering, Industrial WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Computer Science; Engineering GA GQ1LZ UT WOS:000441394300007 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Raja, R Zhou, W Li, XY Ullah, A Ma, JF AF Raja, Rameez Zhou, Wei Li, Xi Yuan Ullah, Asad Ma, Jianfu TI Social identity change as an integration strategy of international students in China SO INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION LA English DT Article ID MULTIPLE GROUP MEMBERSHIPS; MULTILEVEL ANALYSIS; EXPERIENCE; ACCULTURATION; DEPRESSION; RESILIENCE; COMMUNITY; STRESS; HEALTH; STRAIN AB This study investigates the role of social identities in the context of international students' transition to China. Sojourners usually confront perceived threats, including adjustment to life-changes in a new society. The transition has a general capacity to disrupt the patterned behaviour of individuals that undermine their health and well-being. Previous studies informed by the Social Identity Model of Identity Change demonstrate that group membership and associated social identities can buffer the adverse effects of transition. However, China's story concerning international students' social identity change is not yet researched. To address this issue, in-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with sixty-three international students. The results revealed that being disconnected from old social networks due to internet restriction leads to potential identity threats during early transition. However, new group memberships with co-national and multinational peers, communication technologies and host-culture adaptation enhanced sojourners' well-being and help to adapt to life-changes in Chinese society. C1 [Raja, Rameez; Zhou, Wei; Li, Xi Yuan] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Sociol & Anthropol, Dept Sociol, South Campus, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China. [Li, Xi Yuan] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Ctr Studies Hong Kong Macao & Pearl River Delta, Guangzhou, Peoples R China. [Ullah, Asad] Univ Agr, Dept Rural Sociol, Peshawar, Pakistan. [Ma, Jianfu] Ctr North Minzu Univ, Dept Anthropol, Lanzhou, Peoples R China. C3 Sun Yat Sen University; Sun Yat Sen University; Agricultural University Peshawar; University of Agriculture Faisalabad RP Raja, R; Zhou, W (corresponding author), Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Sociol & Anthropol, Dept Sociol, South Campus, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China. 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PD OCT PY 2021 VL 59 IS 5 BP 230 EP 247 DI 10.1111/imig.12827 EA FEB 2021 PG 18 WC Demography WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Demography GA WJ4MW UT WOS:000614437600001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ahmadinia, H AF Ahmadinia, Hamed TI Breaking the barriers: The impact of health information and cultural factors on immigrant health in the Nordic countries SO LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Cultural influences; Health information access; Immigrant health behaviors; Information professionals; Nordic countries ID BELIEF MODEL; LIFE-STYLE; SEEKING; BEHAVIORS; WOMEN; CARE; ACCULTURATION; COMMUNICATION; SERVICES; REFUGEES AB Immigrants encounter cultural adaptation challenges impacting their health behaviors and outcomes, with health information and cultural factors influencing their actions. A survey of 340 participants from Finland, Norway, and Sweden was conducted, and the data were analyzed using structural equation modelling. Results show that health beliefs and access to health information, mainly via the Internet, significantly predict immigrants' intentions to engage in health-related actions, while perceived barriers negatively affect their adoption of healthy behavior. The findings underscore the importance of information professionals in providing culturally relevant health information and resources to immigrants and emphasize the need for policymakers to consider cultural factors and information sources in health promotion efforts targeting immigrant populations. This study adds value to the information science literature by highlighting the role of information access and cultural context in shaping health-related actions among immigrants in Nordic countries. C1 [Ahmadinia, Hamed] Abo Akad Univ, Informat Studies, Fanriksgatan 3B, Turku 20500, Finland. C3 Abo Akademi University RP Ahmadinia, H (corresponding author), Abo Akad Univ, Informat Studies, Fanriksgatan 3B, Turku 20500, Finland. EM hamed.ahmadinia@abo.fi RI Ahmadinia, Hamed/E-1097-2012 OI Ahmadinia, Hamed/0000-0002-3505-8101 FU Finnish cultural foundation; Karl-Erik Henriksson Foundation; Abo Akademis Jubileumsfond FX This research was supported by the grants from Finnish cultural foundation, Karl-Erik Henriksson Foundation, and Abo Akademis Jubileumsfond. Writing this paper would not have been possible without the exceptional guidance, consultation, and support of Dr. Kristina Eriksson-Backa (abo Akademi University), Dr. Shahrokh Nikou (Abo Akademi University), Professor Jannica Heinstrom (University of OsloMet), and Professor Ola Pilerot (University of Boras). 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Infor. Sci. Res. PD JUL PY 2023 VL 45 IS 3 AR 101253 DI 10.1016/j.lisr.2023.101253 EA JUN 2023 PG 10 WC Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Information Science & Library Science GA K8YR1 UT WOS:001019243500001 OA hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Tung, WC Cook, DM Lu, MG AF Tung, Wei-Chen Cook, Daniel M. Lu, Minggen TI Sexual Behaviors, Decisional Balance, and Self-efficacy Among a Sample of Chinese College Students in the United States SO JOURNAL OF AMERICAN COLLEGE HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Chinese; college students; condom; perceived barriers; perceived benefits; self-efficacy; sexual behavior; Transtheoretical Model stages ID CONDOM USE; UNIVERSITY-STUDENTS; TRANSMITTED-DISEASES; SUBSTANCE USE; RISK-FACTORS; ACCULTURATION; PERCEPTIONS; PREDICTORS; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES AB Objectives: To assess sexual behaviors and condom use including perceived benefits, barriers, and self-efficacy among Chinese college students in the United States. Participants: One hundred thirty-three Chinese undergraduate and graduate students studying at 3 US universities. Methods: Self-report Internet questionnaire grounded in the Transtheoretical Model (TTM) framework analyzed with multivariate linear regression. Results: More than half (57.9%) have initiated sex. Only 27.3% used condoms every time. Frequent reasons for not using condoms were trust in partner, reduced pleasure, and partner dislike for condoms. Participants in the earlier TTM stages (precontemplation, contemplation, preparation) reported more worry about making partners angry if condoms were used and lower self-efficacy in situations involving alcohol or drug use and perceived low-risk scenarios. Conclusions: Interventions should increase condom availability to students and should also make condom use more acceptable, more often expected, and easier to discuss. C1 [Tung, Wei-Chen] Univ Nevada, Orvis Sch Nursing, Reno, NV 89557 USA. [Cook, Daniel M.; Lu, Minggen] Univ Nevada, Sch Community Hlth Sci, Reno, NV 89557 USA. C3 Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno; Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno RP Tung, WC (corresponding author), Univ Nevada, Orvis Sch Nursing, Mail Stop 134, Reno, NV 89557 USA. 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Am. Coll. Health PY 2012 VL 60 IS 5 BP 367 EP 373 DI 10.1080/07448481.2012.663839 PG 7 WC Education & Educational Research; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 959EQ UT WOS:000305296100004 PM 22686359 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Pavlova, B Uher, R Papezova, H AF Pavlova, Barbara Uher, Rudolf Papezova, Hana TI It would not have happened to me at home qualitative exploration of sojourns abroad and eating disorders in young Czech women SO EUROPEAN EATING DISORDERS REVIEW LA English DT Article DE Czech Republic; course; eating disorders; onset; qualitative ID ANOREXIA-NERVOSA; ACCULTURATION AB Background: Eating disorders can be triggered by life events involving migration and acculturation. Aim: To explore associations between sojourns abroad and the onset and course of eating disorders. Method: Six semi-structured interviews with women with an eating disorder and history of sojourn abroad and seven first-person Internet testimonies were analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA). Results: We identified three trajectories relating eating disorders to sojourns abroad: (1) weight-gain when abroad associated with later development of an eating disorder, (11) development or worsening of an eating disorder when abroad; (III) stay abroad as an attempt to escape the illness. Three topics informed on the impact of sojourns abroad on mental health: (A) different food and eating habits; (B) negative emotions; (C) illness as attempt to achieve something valuable. Conclusion: The importance of the identified trajectories and topics relating eating disorders to sojourns abroad needs to be estimated in an epidemiological study. Copyright (C) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association. C1 [Pavlova, Barbara; Uher, Rudolf] Inst Psychiat, Eating Disorders Res Unit, London SE5 8UU, England. [Pavlova, Barbara; Uher, Rudolf; Papezova, Hana] Charles Univ Prague, Sch Med 1, Prague, Czech Republic. C3 University of London; King's College London; Charles University Prague RP Pavlova, B (corresponding author), Inst Psychiat, Eating Disorders Res Unit, POB 59,De Crespigny Pk, London SE5 8UU, England. 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Eat. Disord. Rev. PD MAY-JUN PY 2008 VL 16 IS 3 BP 207 EP 214 DI 10.1002/erv.819 PG 8 WC Psychology, Clinical WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 303BW UT WOS:000256015500006 PM 17708520 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Yoon, TI Kim, KH Eom, HJ AF Yoon, Tae-Il Kim, Kyung-Hee Eom, Han-Jin TI The border-crossing of habitus: media consumption, motives, and reading strategies among Asian immigrant women in South Korea SO MEDIA CULTURE & SOCIETY LA English DT Article DE Asian diaspora; cultural capital; habitus; media reading; multiculturalism; new immigrants ID INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; ACCULTURATION; INTERNET; AUDIENCE; TASTE AB Drawing on Bourdieu's concepts of cultural capital and habitus, this study investigates media consumption, motives of media use, and reading strategies among Asian immigrant women in South Korea. The interview data from this study reveal that the total sum of media consumption among Asian immigrant informants tends to increase after immigration and that their media consumption can be regarded as omnivorous in style. Acquiring the host cultural capital and maintaining the home cultural capital are the major drives for their media use, resulting in three motives: the need for adaptation, the need for ethnic affirmation, and the need for relaxation. In response to the multicultural representation of the host media, the immigrant informants employ various reading strategies, such as empathetic reading, critical reading, distantiated reading, and avoidance of reading. The findings are discussed in light of the dialectic of habitus, the possibilities of multicultural capital, and the necessity for media education. C1 [Yoon, Tae-Il; Kim, Kyung-Hee; Eom, Han-Jin] Hallym Univ, Chunchon, South Korea. 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PD APR PY 2011 VL 33 IS 3 BP 415 EP 431 DI 10.1177/0163443710394901 PG 17 WC Communication; Sociology WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Sociology GA 752DI UT WOS:000289668500005 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Gea-Caballero, V Castro-Sanchez, E Diaz-Herrera, MA Sarabia-Cobo, C Juarez-Vela, R Zabaleta-Del Olmo, E AF Gea-Caballero, Vicente Castro-Sanchez, Enrique Angel Diaz-Herrera, Miguel Sarabia-Cobo, Carmen Juarez-Vela, Raul Zabaleta-Del Olmo, Edurne TI Motivations, Beliefs, and Expectations of Spanish Nurses Planning Migration for Economic Reasons: A Cross-Sectional, Web-Based Survey SO JOURNAL OF NURSING SCHOLARSHIP LA English DT Article DE Administration; nursing practice; policy; work environment/working conditions ID EDUCATED NURSES; EXPERIENCES; HEALTH; GLOBALIZATION; IMMIGRATION; MOBILITY; EUROPE; WORK AB Purpose Migration of nurses is not a new or recent event. During the past few decades, nursing migration flows have been a constant trend worldwide. The main objective of this study was to explore the motivations, beliefs, and expectations that Spanish nurses had when considering migration to another country in the near future. Design Cross-sectional, Internet survey of Spanish nurses planning migration for professional reasons. Methods Ad hoc, web-based questionnaire following the Nurses Early Exit Study guidelines. Findings One hundred seventy-two nurses responded. Fifty percent of the participants intended to emigrate in the following 6 months and had chosen the United Kingdom as their destination. The most important drivers of migration were unemployment or precarious employment, and professional development. Fifty-eight percent of the participants were very afraid of experiencing discrimination or rejection. Conclusions This first study conducted in Spain directly exploring determinants of nurse migration highlighted globalization-driven factors and specific acculturation fears C1 [Gea-Caballero, Vicente] Univ Valencia, La Fe Nursing Sch, Valencia, Spain. [Gea-Caballero, Vicente] La Fe GREIACC Res Inst, Valencia, Spain. [Castro-Sanchez, Enrique] Imperial Coll London, Hlth Protect Res Unit Healthcare Associated Infec, Natl Inst Hlth Res, London, England. [Angel Diaz-Herrera, Miguel] Hosp Univ Gen Catalunya, Knowledge Mobilisat Unit, Catalan Inst Hlth, Primary Care Nursing Team St Ildefons Cornella 2, Barcelona, Spain. [Sarabia-Cobo, Carmen] Univ Cantabria, Fac Nursing, Santander, Spain. [Juarez-Vela, Raul] Univ Salamanca, Fac Hlth Sci, Salamanca, Spain. [Zabaleta-Del Olmo, Edurne] Inst Res Primary Care Jordi Gol, Barcelona, Spain. [Zabaleta-Del Olmo, Edurne] Catalan Inst Hlth, Primary Care Management Barcelona Ciutat, Barcelona, Spain. [Zabaleta-Del Olmo, Edurne] Autonomous Univ Barcelona, Bellaterra, Cerdanyola Del, Spain. [Zabaleta-Del Olmo, Edurne] Girona Univ, Fac Nursing, Girona, Spain. C3 University of Valencia; Imperial College London; quironsalud Group; Universidad de Cantabria; University of Salamanca; Autonomous University of Barcelona; Universitat de Girona RP Castro-Sanchez, E (corresponding author), Imperial Coll London, NIHR HPRU Healthcare Associated Infect & Antimicr, Du Cane Rd, London W12 0NN, England. EM e.castro-sanchez@imperial.ac.uk RI Díaz-Herrera, Miguel Ángel/D-4103-2016; del Olmo, Edurne Zabaleta/A-2418-2013; Sarabia-Cobo, Carmen M/T-8293-2019; Castro-Sanchez, Enrique/H-7893-2019 OI Díaz-Herrera, Miguel Ángel/0000-0001-6014-2180; del Olmo, Edurne Zabaleta/0000-0002-5072-8548; Sarabia-Cobo, Carmen M/0000-0002-7929-4042; Castro-Sanchez, Enrique/0000-0002-3351-9496; /0000-0003-3597-2048 CR Aiken LH, 2014, LANCET, V383, P1824, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62631-8 Alexis O, 2015, NURS OUTLOOK, V63, P238, DOI 10.1016/j.outlook.2014.10.005 Alexis O, 2012, J CLIN NURS, V21, P1435, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2011.03922.x [Anonymous], 2006, NURSES MOVE MIGRATIO [Anonymous], 2009, EUR UN STAND NURS MI [Anonymous], 2003, WE NEED RESPECT EXPE [Anonymous], 2003, INT MIGRATION HLTH W [Anonymous], 2011, CANTERBURY LAW REV [Anonymous], 2003, INT NURSE MOBILITY T [Anonymous], 2008, GUID INC HLTH PROF Bach S, 2007, BRIT J IND RELAT, V45, P383, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8543.2007.00619.x Batnitzky A, 2011, SOC CULT GEOGR, V12, P181, DOI 10.1080/14649365.2011.545142 Benton DC, 2013, INT NURS REV, V60, P157, DOI 10.1111/inr.12008 Benton DC, 2014, COLLEGIAN, V21, P53, DOI 10.1016/j.colegn.2013.01.001 Blake Nicholas, 2010, Aust Nurs J, V18, P24 Bradby H, 2014, HEALTH-LONDON, V18, P580, DOI 10.1177/1363459314524803 Bruyneel L, 2013, INT J NURS STUD, V50, P202, DOI 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.06.013 Buchan J, 2004, B WORLD HEALTH ORGAN, V82, P587 BUCHAN J, 2005, INT MIGRATION NURSES Bygnes S, 2017, SOCIOLOGY, V51, P258, DOI 10.1177/0038038515589300 Cortes P, 2014, J HEALTH ECON, V37, P164, DOI 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.06.008 Cutcliffe JR, 2011, ARCH PSYCHIAT NURS, V25, P320, DOI 10.1016/j.apnu.2011.03.006 Dywili S, 2013, J NURS MANAGE, V21, P511, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-2834.2011.01318.x El-Jardali F, 2008, INT J NURS STUD, V45, P1490, DOI 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2007.10.012 El-Jardali F, 2011, INT J NURS STUD, V48, P204, DOI 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2010.07.009 England K, 2013, SOC CULT GEOGR, V14, P558, DOI 10.1080/14649365.2013.786789 European Commission regulated professions database, 2018, GEOGR MOB EST Fahy N, 2017, LANCET, V390, P2110, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)31926-8 Freeman M, 2012, J ADV NURS, V68, P1176, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2011.05858.x Galbany-Estragues P, 2016, INT J NURS STUD, V63, P112, DOI 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2016.08.013 Glinos IA, 2015, HEALTH POLICY, V119, P1529, DOI 10.1016/j.healthpol.2015.08.010 Hendel T, 2011, NURS EDUC TODAY, V31, P259, DOI 10.1016/j.nedt.2010.11.008 International Council of Nurses, 2005, INT MIGR NURS TRENDS Kaestner R, 2012, J URBAN ECON, V71, P219, DOI 10.1016/j.jue.2011.11.002 Keighley T, 2012, INT NURS REV, V59, P181, DOI 10.1111/j.1466-7657.2011.00958.x Keighley T, 2013, INT NURS REV, V60, P86, DOI 10.1111/j.1466-7657.2012.01031.x Khaliq Amir A, 2009, Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont), V22, P24 Kingma M., 2008, ONLINE J ISSUES NURS, V13, P1 Kuhlmann E., 2015, EUROPEAN J PUBLIC HL, V25, DOI [10.1093/eurpub/ckv167.074, DOI 10.1093/EURPUB/CKV167.074] Li HY, 2014, Int J Nurs Sci, V1, P314, DOI 10.1016/j.ijnss.2014.07.006 Ma AX, 2010, INT J NURS PRACT, V16, P443, DOI 10.1111/j.1440-172X.2010.01868.x Manzano-Garcia G, 2014, NURS INQ, V21, P358, DOI 10.1111/nin.12069 Masselink LE, 2014, NURS OUTLOOK, V62, P39, DOI 10.1016/j.outlook.2013.10.012 Matier M. 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Nurs. Scholarsh. PD MAR PY 2019 VL 51 IS 2 BP 178 EP 186 DI 10.1111/jnu.12455 PG 9 WC Nursing WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Nursing GA HO5BW UT WOS:000460938800007 PM 30628174 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Britto, PR Amer, MM AF Britto, Pia Rebello Amer, Mona M. TI An exploration of cultural identity patterns and the family context among Arab Muslim young adults in America SO APPLIED DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE LA English DT Article ID WORLD-WIDE-WEB; ETHNIC-IDENTITY; ACCULTURATION; IMMIGRANT; SOCIALIZATION; ADOLESCENTS; ADJUSTMENT; PREDICTORS; CHILDREN; SUPPORT AB While many studies have explored cultural adaptation and development and its correlates among adult Arab immigrants to the United States (U.S.), little empirical work has focused on Arab youth who were raised in the U.S., particularly Arab Muslim young adults. The present study explores cultural identity patterns and the sociodemographic and family contexts of 150 Arab Muslim American young adults ages 18-25 who completed an Internet study. The participants fell into three cultural identity groups: High Bicultural, Moderate Bicultural, and High Arab Cultural. Although all three groups demonstrated positive general family functioning, the Moderate Bicultural group was distinct in that they were less likely to be engaged or married, and they experienced less family support and more family acculturative stressors. The results highlight the importance of the family context in contributing to a stronger sense of cultural identity for young adults who fall at the intersection of Arab and American culture and Muslim faith. C1 [Britto, Pia Rebello] Yale Univ, Ctr Child Study, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. [Amer, Mona M.] Yale Univ, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. C3 Yale University; Yale University RP Britto, PR (corresponding author), Yale Univ, Ctr Child Study, 230 S Frontage Rd, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. 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Dev. Sci. PY 2007 VL 11 IS 3 BP 137 EP 150 DI 10.1080/10888690701454633 PG 14 WC Psychology, Developmental WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 261DB UT WOS:000253058200004 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Becerra, EP Korgaonkar, PK AF Becerra, Enrique P. Korgaonkar, Pradeep K. TI HISPANICS' INFORMATION SEARCH AND PATRONAGE INTENTIONS ONLINE SO JOURNAL OF ELECTRONIC COMMERCE RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Hispanic American; information search online; patronage online; e-tailing; ethnic identification ID INTERNET; IDENTIFICATION; ACCULTURATION; TECHNOLOGY; ACCEPTANCE; ATTITUDES; MEDIA; EXPERIENCE; ETHNICITY; BEHAVIOR AB In the last decade, the Hispanic population of the United States has grown exponentially. The purchasing power of Hispanics in the United States exceeds $870 billion. However, little is known about Hispanics' information-seeking and online-purchase behaviors. This study attempts to fill the gaps in the existing literature. We develop a model of Hispanics' online information seeking and purchase behaviors using the Model of Online Pre-Purchase Intentions (MOPI) and test the new model via LISREL. As suggested by MOPI, the results confirm that Hispanics' intentions to search for information online and their prior purchase experience lead to intentions to purchase online. The study, based on a sample of Hispanic Americans, confirms that ethnic identification, perceived behavioral control, prior purchase experience, and household income play important roles in affecting Hispanics' online information seeking and purchase intentions. The findings also suggest that online stores should concentrate on young, affluent, and educated Hispanic Americans with high degrees of ethnic identification because they are more likely to purchase online. Conclusions and implications are discussed. C1 [Becerra, Enrique P.] Texas State Univ San Marcos, Dept Mkt, McCoy Coll Business Adm, San Marcos, TX 78666 USA. [Korgaonkar, Pradeep K.] Florida Atlantic Univ, Barry Kaye Coll Business, InternetCoast Inst Adams Prof Mkt, Davie, FL 33314 USA. C3 Texas State University System; Texas State University San Marcos; State University System of Florida; Florida Atlantic University RP Becerra, EP (corresponding author), Texas State Univ San Marcos, Dept Mkt, McCoy Coll Business Adm, 601 Univ Dr, San Marcos, TX 78666 USA. 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Electron. Commer. Res. PY 2009 VL 10 IS 2 BP 76 EP 93 PG 18 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA V17FC UT WOS:000207922100002 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ballesteros, JL Hilliard, RC AF Ballesteros, Jorge L. Hilliard, Robert C. TI US-Based Latina/O College Students' Attitudes toward Online Counseling SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COUNSELLING LA English DT Article DE Latinos; College students; Mental health; Online therapy; Help-seeking ID MENTAL-HEALTH-SERVICES; FACE-TO-FACE; GENDER-ROLE CONFLICT; COGNITIVE-BEHAVIOR THERAPY; HELP-SEEKING; PSYCHOLOGICAL TREATMENTS; BIPOLAR DISORDER; SELF-CONCEALMENT; ILLNESS STIGMA; INTERNET AB The purpose of the study was to examine the attitudes of Latina/o college students in the U.S. toward online counseling, with particular attention to the role of gender, self-stigma, perceptions of stigma by others, and acculturation within a sample of 231 college students. This cross-sectional survey used the 'Perceived Stigmatization by Others for Seeking Psychological Help Scale' (Vogel et al. 2009), the 'Self-Stigma of Seeking Psychological Help Scale' (Vogel et al. 2006), and the 'Short Acculturation Scale for Hispanics' (Marin et al. 1987) to measure attitudes toward online counseling. Online counseling had a significant but weak relationship with self-stigma. Additionally, a hierarchical multiple regression analysis tested variables that might predict attitudes toward online counseling, using previous experience with counseling and gender as control variables. In the overall model, previous experience with counseling, acculturation, and self-stigma significantly predicted attitudes toward online counseling. The implications of the findings as well as areas for future research are discussed. C1 [Ballesteros, Jorge L.] Ball State Univ, Dept Counseling Psychol, Muncie, IN 47306 USA. [Hilliard, Robert C.] West Virginia Univ, Dept Counseling Rehabil Counseling & Counseling P, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA. [Hilliard, Robert C.] West Virginia Univ, Dept Phys Act & Sport Sci, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA. C3 Ball State University; West Virginia University; West Virginia University RP Hilliard, RC (corresponding author), West Virginia Univ, Dept Counseling Rehabil Counseling & Counseling P, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA.; Hilliard, RC (corresponding author), West Virginia Univ, Dept Phys Act & Sport Sci, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA. 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J. Adv. Couns. PD DEC PY 2016 VL 38 IS 4 BP 269 EP 285 DI 10.1007/s10447-016-9271-x PG 17 WC Psychology, Applied WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Psychology GA VG3HT UT WOS:000446374000001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Zheng, YL Yang, XJ Liu, QQ Chu, XW Huang, QT Zhou, ZK AF Zheng, Yueli Yang, Xiujuan Liu, Qingqi Chu, Xiaowei Huang, Qitong Zhou, Zongkui TI Perceived stress and online compulsive buying among women: A moderated mediation model SO COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE Perceived stress; Online compulsive buying; Negative coping; Self-esteem; Women ID PROBLEMATIC INTERNET USE; SELF-ESTEEM; COPING STRATEGIES; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; PURCHASE DECISIONS; RETAIL THERAPY; LIFE EVENTS; ANXIETY; SYMPTOMS; IDENTITY AB Although perceived stress has been shown to be related to online compulsive buying among women, little is known about the underlying mechanisms of this association. The present study examined the mediating role of negative coping and the moderating role of self-esteem in the association between perceived stress and online compulsive buying. A sample of 548 female consumers (M age = 21.41 years, SD = 4.40) completed questionnaire measures of perceived stress, self-esteem, negative coping, and online compulsive buying. Frequency of online buying and amount of money spent online per month were used as covariates. Results indicated that perceived stress was positively associated with online compulsive buying. Negative coping partially mediated this association. In addition, the direct effect of perceived stress on online compulsive buying, and the mediating effect of negative coping, were moderated by self-esteem. Specifically, these effects were weaker for women with higher self-esteem. These findings advance our understanding of how and when perceived stress is related to online compulsive buying among women. Limitations and implications are discussed. C1 [Zheng, Yueli; Yang, Xiujuan; Liu, Qingqi; Chu, Xiaowei; Huang, Qitong; Zhou, Zongkui] Minist Educ, Key Lab Adolescent Cyberpsychol & Behav CCNU, Wuhan 430079, Hubei, Peoples R China. [Zheng, Yueli; Yang, Xiujuan; Liu, Qingqi; Chu, Xiaowei; Huang, Qitong; Zhou, Zongkui] Cent China Normal Univ, Sch Psychol, Wuhan 430079, Hubei, Peoples R China. C3 Central China Normal University RP Zhou, ZK (corresponding author), Minist Educ, Key Lab Adolescent Cyberpsychol & Behav CCNU, Wuhan 430079, Hubei, Peoples R China. EM zhouzk@mail.ccnu.edu.cn RI Chu, Xiaowei/GOH-0963-2022 OI Chu, Xiaowei/0000-0002-4430-8731; Liu, Qingqi/0000-0001-5169-8689 FU Major Program of National Social Science Foundation of China [11ZD151]; Fundamental Research Funds of Central China Normal University [CCNU18CXTD03]; Research Program Funds of the Collaborative Innovation Center of Assessment toward Basic Education Quality at Beijing Normal University [2019-04-003-BZPK01] FX This work was supported by Major Program of National Social Science Foundation of China [Project No. 11&ZD151], Fundamental Research Funds of Central China Normal University [Project No. CCNU18CXTD03], and the Research Program Funds of the Collaborative Innovation Center of Assessment toward Basic Education Quality at Beijing Normal University (grant numbers 2019-04-003-BZPK01). No competing financial interests existed. 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PD FEB PY 2020 VL 103 BP 13 EP 20 DI 10.1016/j.chb.2019.09.012 PG 8 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Psychology, Experimental WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA JU1BB UT WOS:000501411800002 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Strohmeier, D Karna, A Salmivalli, C AF Strohmeier, Dagmar Karna, Antti Salmivalli, Christina TI Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Risk Factors for Peer Victimization in Immigrant Youth in Finland SO DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE immigrant youth; victimization; racist victimization; rejection; intrapersonal problems ID PERCEIVED DISCRIMINATION; PSYCHOLOGICAL ADJUSTMENT; MULTICULTURAL SCHOOLS; MIDDLE SCHOOL; SELF-WORTH; ADOLESCENTS; ACCULTURATION; ADAPTATION; FRIENDSHIP; VICTIMS AB This study (a) compared native Finns and immigrant children with respect to different forms of peer victimization and (b) tested whether intrapersonal (e.g., depression) and interpersonal (e.g., peer rejection) risk factors help to explain the association between immigrant status and peer victimization. The sample was drawn from the first phase of a large intervention evaluation project, KiVa, in Finland, composed of 4,957 native Finns (51% girls), 146 first-generation immigrants (48% girls), and 310 second-generation immigrants (53% girls) 9 to 12 years of age. The concurrent data included self- and peer reports collected via Internet-based questionnaires. Compared with native youth, first- and second-generation immigrants were more often targets of both peer- and self-reported victimization. Both immigrant groups experienced higher levels of physical, racist, and sexual victimization than natives. Furthermore, second-generation immigrants reported higher levels of property damage, threats, and cybervictimization than native Finns. Significant indirect effects were found between immigrant status and victimization. Interpersonal but not intrapersonal risk factors helped to explain these associations. C1 [Strohmeier, Dagmar] Univ Vienna, Fac Psychol, Inst Econ Psychol Educ Psychol & Evaluat, A-1010 Vienna, Austria. [Karna, Antti; Salmivalli, Christina] Univ Turku, Div Psychol, Dept Behav Sci & Philosophy, Turku, Finland. [Salmivalli, Christina] Univ Stavanger, Ctr Behav Res, Stavanger, Norway. C3 University of Vienna; University of Turku; Universitetet i Stavanger RP Strohmeier, D (corresponding author), Univ Vienna, Fac Psychol, Inst Econ Psychol Educ Psychol & Evaluat, Univ Str 7, A-1010 Vienna, Austria. 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Psychol. PD JAN PY 2011 VL 47 IS 1 BP 248 EP 258 DI 10.1037/a0020785 PG 11 WC Psychology, Developmental WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 710BS UT WOS:000286486500022 PM 21058827 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Doyle, N McDowall, A Waseem, U AF Doyle, Nancy McDowall, Almuth Waseem, Uzma TI Intersectional Stigma for Autistic People at Work: A Compound Adverse Impact Effect on Labor Force Participation and Experiences of Belonging SO AUTISM IN ADULTHOOD LA English DT Article DE autism hiring; autism employment; intersectionality; equality; diversity; inclusion; and belonging (EDIB); stigma theory; autism; race; gender; sexual orientation ID ADULTS; EMPLOYMENT; NEURODIVERSITY AB Background: Little research addresses the experiences of autistic people at work, yet employment prospects remain bleak. The extant literature takes a largely remedial perspective and does not focus on harnessing this population's considerable talents. In global organizational practice, several programs purposefully target autistic people for their abilities. However, preliminary evidence suggests that such programs are inadvertently attracting mainly White males, to the exclusion of other demographics. Therefore, stigma surrounding autism at work remains, creating potential compound adverse impacts by marginalizing identities, including gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and socioeconomic status. We explored the intersection of autism with other marginalizing identities in the context of work. The research focused on labor force participation for autistic people and, for those in employment, perceptions of exclusion and inclusion. We compared the aforementioned variables by gender identity, racial identity, sexuality, socioeconomic background, and geographic origin.Methods: We undertook a global cross-sectional survey, advertised through various social media platforms and promoted directly to relevant organizations. The survey included a range of validated measures as well as demographic information. We analyzed the data with frequencies, cross tabulations, chi-square tests, and non-parametric, group-wise comparisons.Results: We found preliminary evidence of reduced rates of employment participation by race and geographic location. Females and non-binary people had lower perceptions of inclusion and belonging at work. The perception of accommodation provision had a strong association with inclusion and belonging; more so than incidental provision of flexibility in environment and scheduling not framed as a specific accommodation.Conclusions: The findings highlight the relational aspects of accommodation and a more universal inclusion perspective. We urge practitioners and researchers to monitor employment participation and levels of inclusion/exclusion using intersectional demographic identification. We appeal for cross-cultural collaboration with academic institutions outside the anglosphere to improve our knowledge of global programs and their impact. Community brief Why is this an important issue?Employment data show that autistic people find it harder to get and keep work. This study focuses on understanding whether multiple identities and people's background make a difference. What is the purpose of this study?We asked a group of Autistic people about gender and race, as well as being gay lesbian, bisexual, transgender or queer (LGBTQ). We asked where people live, their education, parents' education and whether they had any diagnoses in addition to autism. We predicted that these things would have a negative effect on autistic employment rates. We thought they would also affect how autistic people felt at work. What we did?An online survey was completed by 576 autistic people. We analyzed whether their identities and backgrounds made it more or less likely that they were in work. We then asked the 387 employed people within this group about their experiences at work. We compared their experiences by identity and background to see whether these made a positive or negative difference. What we found?We found that White Autistic people living in western countries such as the United States and Europe were more likely to have jobs. They were also more likely to have jobs specifically designed for Autistic people. We found that women, non-binary, and transgender autistic people felt less included at work. We also found that feeling that someone cares is more important than any adjustments to work scheduling such as flexible working to support people. What do these findings add to what was already known?It is already known that autistic people are less likely to be in work than non-autistic people. This study shows that these overall numbers are masking important differences arising from gender, race, and ethnicity. What are the potential weaknesses in the study?The survey was taken at one point in time, which does not explain how these differences happened. Most people who completed the study were highly educated. We did not have enough people from the non-western countries or communities of color. Therefore, the sample is not large or diverse enough to draw firm conclusions. How will the study help Autistic people now or in the future?We hope that the study inspires people to think about different identities and additional stigma for autism at work programs. We have provided a sample of baseline data from all over the world that shows a difference by location. Even though this is just a trend, it might spark more research looking at the crossover between autism, identities, and backgrounds. It provides a starting point to help researchers who want to do longer studies that test interventions to improve autistic participation and experiences in work. C1 [Doyle, Nancy; McDowall, Almuth; Waseem, Uzma] Univ London, Birkbeck Coll, Sch Org Psychol, London, England. [Doyle, Nancy] Birkbeck Univ London, Sch Business Econ & Informat, Dept Org Psychol, Malet St, Bloomsbury WC1E 7HX, London, England. C3 University of London; Birkbeck University London RP Doyle, N (corresponding author), Birkbeck Univ London, Sch Business Econ & Informat, Dept Org Psychol, Malet St, Bloomsbury WC1E 7HX, London, England. 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I use data from a 2009-2010 Internet survey into which I incorporated country-contextual characteristics. The results of multivariate analyses show that a social integration combining duration of residence abroad and local citizenship enhances religio-ethnic identification. Another measure of integration, social networks, deters group behaviors. All measures of general integration inhibit attachment to the home country, whereas religio-ethnic acculturation is largely insignificant for transnationalism. The religiosity of the new country does not influence immigrants' religio-ethnic patterns or homeland attachment. Insofar as group size is a significant determinant of particularistic behaviors, it weakens them. The more policy-based opportunities newcomers receive, the more they dissociate from group behaviors and homeland ties. Irrespective of individual and contextual factors, living in the United States encourages group affiliation more than living in Europe does. The results are discussed in reference to four working hypothesesmarginalization, integration, assimilation, and separationand from a U.S.-European comparative perspective. C1 Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, A Harman Inst Contemporary Jewry, IL-91905 Jerusalem, Israel. C3 Hebrew University of Jerusalem RP Rebhun, U (corresponding author), Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, A Harman Inst Contemporary Jewry, IL-91905 Jerusalem, Israel. 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Sci. Stud. Relig. PD SEP PY 2014 VL 53 IS 3 BP 613 EP 635 DI 10.1111/jssr.12135 PG 23 WC Sociology; Religion WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) SC Sociology; Religion GA AP1ZS UT WOS:000341872000010 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Rahman, M Justiss, AA Berenson, AB AF Rahman, Mahbubur Justiss, Abigail A. Berenson, Abbey B. TI Racial Differences in Obesity Risk Knowledge among Low-Income Reproductive-Age Women SO JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF NUTRITION LA English DT Article DE obesity; ORK-10 measure; low-income women; race/ethnicity ID SCALE; DEATH AB Objective: To examine the level of obesity risk knowledge (ORK) among reproductive-age women and racial differences associated with it.Methods: We conducted this study based on cross-sectional data gathered from 1153 (310 whites, 491 blacks, 335 Hispanics, and 17 others) low-income women (16-40 years old) attending publicly funded reproductive health clinics in Texas during 2010-2011. Data were collected through self-administered questionnaires that assessed sociodemographics and ORK based on ORK-10 scale.Results: The mean score was 5.9, 5.3, and 5.3 (possible score 0-10) for whites, blacks, and Hispanics, respectively. Acculturated Hispanic women had mean ORK scores (mean score 5.8) similar to scores of whites. Multiple linear regression analysis after adjusting for confounders showed that ORK score was lower among black ( coefficient = -0.6; p < 0.001) and Hispanic ( coefficient = -0.4; p = 0.002) women than among white women. Age, high school diploma or college level education, and Internet use, but not obesity status, were associated with higher ORK scores.Conclusion: In general, obesity risk knowledge was low among low-income reproductive-age women, and knowledge scores were even lower among minority women. Strategies to incorporate ORK into obesity awareness and prevention programs should be formulated. C1 [Rahman, Mahbubur; Justiss, Abigail A.; Berenson, Abbey B.] Univ Texas Med Branch, Dept Obstet & Gynecol, Ctr Interdisciplinary Res Womens Hlth, Galveston, TX 77555 USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston RP Rahman, M (corresponding author), Univ Texas Med Branch, Dept Obstet & Gynecol, Ctr Interdisciplinary Res Womens Hlth, Galveston, TX 77555 USA. EM marahman@utmb.edu FU K24 grant [K24HD043659] FX This project was supported by a K24 grant awarded to A. B. B. (K24HD043659). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of Child Health & Human Development or the National Institutes of Health. 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PD DEC 1 PY 2012 VL 31 IS 6 BP 397 EP 400 DI 10.1080/07315724.2012.10720465 PG 4 WC Nutrition & Dietetics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Nutrition & Dietetics GA 190SX UT WOS:000322361600003 PM 23756583 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Salivar, EJG Roddy, MK Nowlan, KM Doss, BD AF Georgia Salivar, Emily J. Roddy, McKenzie K. Nowlan, Kathryn M. Doss, Brian D. TI Effectiveness of the Online OurRelationship Program for Underserved Couples SO COUPLE AND FAMILY PSYCHOLOGY-RESEARCH AND PRACTICE LA English DT Article DE couple; minority; internet; online; web-based intervention ID RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; COMPUTER-BASED PREVENTION; RELATIONSHIP EDUCATION; MENTAL-HEALTH; MARRIAGE CHECKUP; CLINICAL-TRIAL; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; AFRICAN-AMERICANS; MARITAL-THERAPY AB Underserved couples (e.g., racial minorities or low-income populations) are at higher risk for relationship distress and dissolution. Although there have been large-scale efforts to improve relationships for underserved couples, these programs have resulted in high attrition and minimal effectiveness. The OurRelationship program is a brief web-based program with demonstrated efficacy in attracting, retaining, and improving relationship functioning (e.g., satisfaction) and individual functioning (e.g., depression, anxiety, and perceived health; Doss et al., 2016). In a sample of 300 couples, the present study demonstrated that outcomes for traditionally underserved couples were generally equivalent to those of nonunderserved couples. Exceptions were found among Hispanic couples, who reported larger gains in perceived health (d = 0.61) and rural couples, who reported smaller improvements in relationship positives (d = = 0.06). However, Hispanic and low-income couples were less likely to complete the OurRelationship program despite experiencing equivalent (or superior) improvements and equal levels of satisfaction with the program. Overall, this study shows that a web-based, relationship-focused intervention may be an important avenue for improving relationship and individual functioning domains for underserved couples, though efforts to improve retention are warranted. C1 [Georgia Salivar, Emily J.] Nova Southeastern Univ, Dept Clin Psychol, Coll Psychol, 3301 Coll Ave, Ft Lauderdale, FL 33314 USA. [Roddy, McKenzie K.; Nowlan, Kathryn M.; Doss, Brian D.] Univ Miami, Dept Psychol, POB 248185, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA. C3 Nova Southeastern University; University of Miami RP Salivar, EJG (corresponding author), Nova Southeastern Univ, Dept Clin Psychol, Coll Psychol, 3301 Coll Ave, Ft Lauderdale, FL 33314 USA. EM esalivar@nova.edu RI Doss, Brian/X-8336-2019 OI Doss, Brian/0000-0002-8039-848X FU Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [R01HD059802]; Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services [90PD0280] FX This research was supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health under award R01HD059802 (to Brian D. Doss) and by the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under award 90PD0280 (to Emily J. Georgia Salivar). Brian D. Doss holds the intellectual property of the OurRelationship program and could gain royalties from any future commercialization of this intellectual property. 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C, 2007, THESIS Zickuhr Kathryn, 2013, HOME BROADBAND 2013 NR 74 TC 15 Z9 15 U1 1 U2 5 PU AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC PI WASHINGTON PA 750 FIRST ST NE, WASHINGTON, DC 20002-4242 USA SN 2160-4096 EI 2160-410X J9 COUPLE FAM PSYCHOL JI Couple Fam. Psychol. PD SEP-DEC PY 2018 VL 7 IS 3-4 BP 212 EP 226 DI 10.1037/cfp0000110 PG 15 WC Family Studies WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Family Studies GA HI1ZN UT WOS:000456243900007 OA Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Chen, LJ AF Chen, Lijun TI Problematic Pornography Use in China SO CURRENT ADDICTION REPORTS LA English DT Article DE Problematic pornography use (PPU); Sexual conservative cultural context; Permissive cultural context; Attitude toward pornography ID ONLINE SEXUAL ACTIVITIES; HETEROSEXUAL MEN; INTERNET; BEHAVIOR; SAMPLE; ACCULTURATION; DISORDER; SEEKING; SCALE AB Purpose of Review China is a typical sexual conservative cultural context country; it is necessary to understand the problematic pornography use (PPU) in China, which may reflect the influence of the conservative culture on PPU. In this review, the pornography use motivation, prevalence, screening scales, diagnosing elements, and intervention situation in China were described. Recent Findings The most preponderant pornography use motivations were self-exploration and seeking education. In line with the international situation in screening PPU, inconsistent assessment resulted in fluctuant prevalence in China. Fortunately, several screening scales were confirmed valid in Chinese sample. The symptoms of PPU among Chinese were similar with samples from other Western countries. More urgently, in China, it appeared there exists a supply-demand imbalance in regards to the prevalence of PPU and the limited treatment options available. Due to the conservative attitude toward sex and pornography, research on pornography use in China is scarce. The Chinese pornography motivations differ from the Western more permissive countries, but the core symptoms of PPU among Chinese are similar with the other Western participants. Actually, in the Chinese public, the prevalence of PPU is high; however, the demand for professional psychotherapy services exceeds the current available resources. C1 [Chen, Lijun] Fuzhou Univ, Sch Humanities & Social Sci, Dept Psychol, 2 Xueyuan Ave, Fuzhou 400715, Fujian, Peoples R China. C3 Fuzhou University RP Chen, LJ (corresponding author), Fuzhou Univ, Sch Humanities & Social Sci, Dept Psychol, 2 Xueyuan Ave, Fuzhou 400715, Fujian, Peoples R China. EM qqkx159@126.com OI chen, lijun/0000-0002-4327-8657 FU National Social Science Foundation of China [19BSH117] FX The research was supported by the National Social Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 19BSH117). 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Addict. Rep. PD JUN PY 2022 VL 9 IS 2 BP 80 EP 85 DI 10.1007/s40429-022-00408-9 EA APR 2022 PG 6 WC Substance Abuse; Psychiatry WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Substance Abuse; Psychiatry GA 1P9QL UT WOS:000782169200001 PM 35433194 OA Green Published, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Amer, MM Hovey, JD AF Amer, Mona M. Hovey, Joseph D. TI Anxiety and depression in a post-September 11 sample of Arabs in the USA SO SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Arab American; Beck Anxiety Inventory; Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale; Anxiety; Depression; Ethnicity ID NUTRITION EXAMINATION SURVEY; CES-D SCALE; NEW-YORK-CITY; MEXICAN-AMERICANS; HISPANIC HEALTH; MENTAL-HEALTH; PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES; PSYCHOLOGICAL-RESEARCH; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; PUERTO-RICANS AB Objective Scant research has examined the mental health of Arab Americans. This study aimed to determine the levels of anxiety and depression in a sample of Arab Americans and compare the rates to normative community samples and samples of other minority ethnic/racial groups. Methods A non-probability sampling approach resulted in 601 adult Arab American respondents from 35 US states. Respondents completed anxiety and depression questionnaires at a form-based Internet site. Results One-fourth of participants reported moderate to severe anxiety levels as measured by the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), and one-half reported depression scores that met clinical caseness as assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D). The present sample of Arab Americans reported significantly higher levels of anxiety and depression compared to standardization samples and community samples of four other minority groups. Conclusions Arab Americans may be at risk for anxiety and depression. Further studies should be conducted to replicate and validate these results, identify stressors that affect this population, and develop recommendations for clinical interventions. C1 [Amer, Mona M.] Amer Univ Cairo, NY Off, SAPE Psychol Unit, New York, NY 10018 USA. [Hovey, Joseph D.] Univ Toledo, Program Study Immigrat & Mental Hlth, Toledo, OH 43606 USA. [Amer, Mona M.] Yale Univ, Sch Med, New Haven, CT USA. [Amer, Mona M.] Amer Univ Cairo, Cairo, Egypt. C3 Egyptian Knowledge Bank (EKB); American University Cairo; University System of Ohio; University of Toledo; Yale University; Egyptian Knowledge Bank (EKB); American University Cairo RP Amer, MM (corresponding author), Amer Univ Cairo, NY Off, SAPE Psychol Unit, 420 5th Ave,3rd Floor, New York, NY 10018 USA. 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Psychiatry Psychiatr. Epidemiol. PD MAR PY 2012 VL 47 IS 3 BP 409 EP 418 DI 10.1007/s00127-011-0341-4 PG 10 WC Psychiatry WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychiatry GA 912HG UT WOS:000301786200008 PM 21287143 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Zeissig, SR Singer, S Koch, L Zeeb, H Merbach, M Bertram, H Eberle, A Schmid-Hopfner, S Holleczek, B Waldmann, A Arndt, V AF Zeissig, Sylke Ruth Singer, Susanne Koch, Lena Zeeb, Hajo Merbach, Martin Bertram, Heike Eberle, Andrea Schmid-Hoepfner, Sieglinde Holleczek, Bernd Waldmann, Annika Arndt, Volker TI Utilisation of psychosocial and informational services in immigrant and non-immigrant German cancer survivors SO PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY LA English DT Article DE cancer; oncology; healthcare use; immigration; ethnicity ID HEALTH-CARE-SYSTEM; MENTAL-HEALTH; MIGRANTS; POPULATION; DEPRESSION; MORTALITY; ATTITUDES; ONCOLOGY; RACISM; RACE AB ObjectiveWe examined psychosocial and informational services used by long-term survivors of breast, colon and prostate cancer in immigrants versus non-immigrants. MethodsPatients were sampled from population-based cancer registries in Germany. They completed a questionnaire assessing immigration biography, service use and socio-demographic characteristics. ResultsData of 6143 cancer survivors were collected of whom 383 (6%) were immigrants. There was no evidence of an association between immigration status and service use. However, immigration biography played a role when patients' and their parents' birthplace were taken into account. When parents were born outside Europe, survivors less frequently used information from the Internet (ORadj 0.4, 95% CI 0.2; 0.8). Web-based information (ORadj 0.7, 95% CI 0.5; 0.9) was less frequently used when the participant was born outside Germany. ConclusionThe differences in the use of psychosocial and informational services between immigrants and non-immigrants seem to be generally small. Acculturation may play a role in service uptake. In survey-based health services research, investigators should not stratify by census-defined immigration status, but rather by cultural background. Copyright (c) 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. C1 [Zeissig, Sylke Ruth] Canc Registry Rhineland Palatinate, Mainz, Germany. [Singer, Susanne] Univ Med Ctr, Inst Med Biostat Epidemiol & Informat, Mainz, Germany. [Koch, Lena; Arndt, Volker] German Canc Res Ctr, Div Clin Epidemiol & Aging Res, Heidelberg, Germany. [Zeeb, Hajo] Leibniz Inst Prevent Res & Epidemiol, Bremen, Germany. [Zeeb, Hajo] Univ Bremen, Hlth Sci Bremen, D-28359 Bremen, Germany. [Merbach, Martin] Assoc Binatl Families & Relationships, Berlin, Germany. [Bertram, Heike] Canc Registry North Rhine Westphalia, Munster, Germany. [Eberle, Andrea] Bremen Canc Registry, Bremen, Germany. [Schmid-Hoepfner, Sieglinde] Canc Registry Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany. [Holleczek, Bernd] Saarland Canc Registry, Saarbrucken, Germany. [Waldmann, Annika] Univ Med Ctr Schleswig Holstein, Inst Social Med & Epidemiol, Lubeck, Germany. C3 Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz; Helmholtz Association; German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ); Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research & Epidemiology (BIPS); University of Bremen; University of Kiel; Schleswig Holstein University Hospital RP Singer, S (corresponding author), Univ Med Ctr, Inst Med Biostat Epidemiol & Informat, Mainz, Germany. EM singers@uni-mainz.de RI /AAM-5330-2020; Arndt, Volker/B-4999-2014; Zeißig, Sylke/ITT-0422-2023; Singer, Susanne/GPT-4385-2022; Waldmann, Annika/A-2700-2016; Arndt, Volker/AAI-7282-2020; Zeeb, Hajo/I-2701-2019; Koch-Gallenkamp, Lena/A-7429-2017 OI Arndt, Volker/0000-0001-9320-8684; Singer, Susanne/0000-0001-5784-7964; Waldmann, Annika/0000-0002-5909-9936; Arndt, Volker/0000-0001-9320-8684; Zeeb, Hajo/0000-0001-7509-242X; Koch-Gallenkamp, Lena/0000-0001-7290-906X CR Al-Krenawi A, 2004, INT J SOC PSYCHIATR, V50, P102, DOI 10.1177/0020764004040957 Andaya AA, 2013, CANCER EPIDEM BIOMAR, V22, P1030, DOI 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-13-0143 [Anonymous], 2013, BEV ERW BEV MIGR ERG [Anonymous], 1999, AUSSIEDLER DEUTSCHLA Avis M, 2008, PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, V17, P940, DOI 10.1002/pon.1284 Baron G, 1993, INFORM CANC PATIENT Boulogne R, 2012, SOC SCI MED, V74, P1213, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.01.002 Bundesamt fur Migration und Fluchtlinge, 2012, MIGR 2012 Chirkov V, 2009, INT J INTERCULT REL, V33, P94, DOI 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2008.12.004 Das A, 2013, SOC SCI MED, V77, P75, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.11.007 Ernst J, 2010, DEUT MED WOCHENSCHR, V135, P1531, DOI 10.1055/s-0030-1262442 Fielding R, 1996, PSYCHO-ONCOL, V5, P321, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1611(199612)5:4<321::AID-PON226>3.0.CO;2-K Glaesmer H, 2009, PSYCHIAT PRAX, V36, P16, DOI 10.1055/s-2008-1067566 Grann V, 2006, SOC SCI MED, V62, P337, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.06.038 Grassi L, 2012, PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, V21, P1027, DOI 10.1002/pon.3154 Hagenaars A., 1994, POVERTY STAT LATE 19 Harris R, 2012, SOC SCI MED, V74, P408, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.11.004 Harrison A, 1997, J MED ETHICS, V23, P101, DOI 10.1136/jme.23.2.101 Horikawa N, 2000, GEN HOSP PSYCHIAT, V22, P37, DOI 10.1016/S0163-8343(99)00042-0 Koch L, 2014, PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, V23, P547, DOI 10.1002/pon.3452 Loewenthal KM, 2001, BRIT J MED PSYCHOL, V74, P293, DOI 10.1348/000711201160993 Merbach M, 2006, PSYCHOL HEALTH, V21, P102 Merbach M, 2008, PSYCHOTHER PSYCH MED, V58, P146, DOI 10.1055/s-2008-1067351 Peto J, 2001, NATURE, V411, P390, DOI 10.1038/35077256 Saxena S, 2007, LANCET, V370, P878, DOI 10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61239-2 Schenk L, 2006, Bundesgesundheitsblatt Gesundheitsforschung Gesundheitsschutz, V49, P853, DOI 10.1007/s00103-006-0018-4 Schwarz R, 2006, PSYCHOTHERAPEUT, V51, P369, DOI 10.1007/s00278-005-0466-6 Singer S, 2011, PSYCHOTHERAPEUT, V56, P386, DOI 10.1007/s00278-011-0859-7 Statistisches Bundesamt, 2014, BEV ERW AUSL BEV ERG SURBONE A, 1993, SUPPORT CARE CANCER, V1, P89, DOI 10.1007/BF00366901 Surbone A, 2007, J CLIN ONCOL, V25, P1463, DOI 10.1200/JCO.2006.09.9218 TRILL MD, 1993, GEN HOSP PSYCHIAT, V15, P21, DOI 10.1016/0163-8343(93)90087-5 Viruell-Fuentes EA, 2012, SOC SCI MED, V75, P2099, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.12.037 Wittig U, 2008, EUR PSYCHIAT, V23, pS28, DOI 10.1016/S0924-9338(08)70059-2 Wittig U, 2004, GESUNDHEITSWESEN, V66, P85, DOI 10.1055/s-2004-812799 Zeeb H, 2008, PSYCHOTHER PSYCH MED, V58, P130, DOI 10.1055/s-2008-1067347 NR 36 TC 15 Z9 15 U1 0 U2 5 PU WILEY-BLACKWELL PI HOBOKEN PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA SN 1057-9249 EI 1099-1611 J9 PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY JI Psycho-Oncol. PD AUG PY 2015 VL 24 IS 8 BP 919 EP 925 DI 10.1002/pon.3742 PG 7 WC Oncology; Psychology; Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Social Sciences, Biomedical WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Oncology; Psychology; Biomedical Social Sciences GA CN7MO UT WOS:000358618900008 PM 25529132 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kim, Y Park, SY AF Kim, Younghee Park, Sung-Yeon TI Reverse Acculturation: A New Cultural Phenomenon Examined Through an Emerging Wedding Practice of Korean Americans in the United States SO FAMILY & CONSUMER SCIENCES RESEARCH JOURNAL LA English DT Article DE acculturation; Korean Americans; traditional Korean wedding; Pyebaek AB Relatively recent Korean immigration to the United States has brought a new development in acculturation, which is recognized as reverse acculturation. The term is coined here for the first time to refer to the cultural practice wherein a fully acculturated U.S.-born minority member introduces the heritage culture to the U.S. society. At the individual level, the cultural development goes from full assimilation/integration to incorporation/reinforcement of heritage culture. At the societal level, the cultural exchange starts at the center of the host society instead of its periphery. Global exchange, advanced computer and communication technology, and multiculturalism in the United States are identified as the facilitators. As an example, reverse acculturation is illustrated here via wedding ceremonies of some Korean Americans who integrate part of traditional Korean wedding with conventional Western wedding. As fully acculturated members of the mainstream U.S. society, these young Korean Americans learn their heritage culture through international travels and advanced communication channels such as the Internet; they then introduce the heritage culture to their non-Korean spouse and family. The implications of reverse acculturation are further discussed for teaching, research, and practice of family and consumer sciences. C1 [Kim, Younghee] Bowling Green State Univ, Sch Family & Consumer Sci, Food Nutr, 306 Johnston Hall, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA. [Park, Sung-Yeon] Bowling Green State Univ, Sch Commun Sci, Dept Telecommun, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA. C3 University System of Ohio; Bowling Green State University; University System of Ohio; Bowling Green State University RP Kim, Y (corresponding author), Bowling Green State Univ, Sch Family & Consumer Sci, Food Nutr, 306 Johnston Hall, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA. EM ykim@bgsu.edu CR Ameredia, 2008, KOR AM DEM [Anonymous], 2006, CAMBRIDGE HDB ACCULT, DOI DOI 10.1017/CBO9780511489891.005 [Anonymous], 1936, AM ANTHROPOL [Anonymous], 2006, IMMIGRANT YOUTH CULT Arends-Toth J, 2006, MON PARENT, P33 Berry JohnW., 1997, HDB CROSS CULTURAL P, V3, P291, DOI DOI 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2005.07.013 Berry JW., 1980, ACCULTURATION THEORY, V9, P25, DOI DOI 10.1525/AE.1981.8.4.02A00200 Buenker J., 2005, MULTICULTURALISM US, Vrevised and expanded edition Chang T, 2005, SELF IDENTITY, V4, P25, DOI 10.1080/13576500444000155 Chun K. M., 2008, CORNER BLISS NIRVANA COLEMAN HLK, 1995, COUNS PSYCHOL, V23, P722, DOI 10.1177/0011000095234011 ComScore, 2007, 61 BILL SEARCH COND Gordon M.M., 1964, ASSIMILATION AM LIFE GRAVES TD, 1967, AM ANTHROPOL, V69, P306, DOI 10.1525/aa.1967.69.3-4.02a00030 HIRSCHMAN C, 1983, ANNU REV SOCIOL, V9, P397, DOI 10.1146/annurev.so.09.080183.002145 Liu D. J., 1996, THESIS Moran L., 2007, MARRYING TRADITIONS Nation Asian, 2008, AS AM HIST DEM ISS Pearce J., 2002, AUSTR 3 INTERNET USA Portes A., 2001, LEGACIES STORY IMMIG U.S. Census, 2000, CENS 2000 BRIEFS SPE Yu E., 2003, 100 YEARS AM HIST KO Zhou M, 1997, INT MIGR REV, V31, P975, DOI 10.2307/2547421 NR 23 TC 11 Z9 11 U1 0 U2 0 PU WILEY PI HOBOKEN PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA SN 1077-727X EI 1552-3934 J9 FAM CONSUM SCI RES J JI Fam. Consum. Sci. Res. J. PD MAR PY 2009 VL 37 IS 3 BP 359 EP 375 DI 10.1177/1077727X08330758 PG 17 WC Family Studies WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Family Studies GA V69VB UT WOS:000211465400009 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lee, YJ Chen, H AF Lee, Yoon-Joo Chen, Huan TI Empowerment or alienation: Chinese and Korean immigrant mothers' perception of mobile media in constructing their social role and facilitating parenting practices in the US SO MOBILE MEDIA & COMMUNICATION LA English DT Article DE acculturation; Chinese and Korean American; mobile media; motherhood ID INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; COMMUNICATION; ACCULTURATION; PATTERNS; ADAPTATION; INTERNET; FACEBOOK; STRESS; LIVES; HOME AB Previous studies have investigated how Chinese and Korean immigrant mothers adjust to life in the US in order to understand their lives and help them to adapt to the new culture. Based on acculturation and mobile media theories, this study explores particularly how Chinese and Korean immigrant mothers' child-rearing practices in the US are mediated by mobile media. Guided by the theoretical framework of interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA), we conducted 16 in-depth interviews with Chinese and Korean immigrant mothers. Findings reveal that while going through the acculturation process, Chinese and Korean immigrant mothers attempt to play the traditional social role of mother as defined in their home countries when utilizing mobile media in their new home. Mobile media have symbolic meanings of empowerment and can be used as tools to deal with prejudice in the host country. This study also suggests that mobile media may mediate Chinese and Korean immigrant mothers' acculturation processes when adopting different types of acculturation strategies (e.g., integration or separation). Implications for practice and future studies are further discussed. C1 [Lee, Yoon-Joo] Washington State Univ, Dept Strateg Commun, Edward R Murrow Coll Commun, Pullman, WA 99164 USA. [Chen, Huan] Univ Florida, Sch Journalism & Commun, Advertising, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA. C3 Washington State University; State University System of Florida; University of Florida RP Lee, YJ (corresponding author), Washington State Univ, Edward R Murrow Coll Commun, Pullman, WA 99163 USA. 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A., 2009, INTERPRETATIVE PHENO, DOI DOI 10.1080/14780880903340091 Williams MG, 2015, MOB MEDIA COMMUN, V3, P3, DOI 10.1177/2050157914544804 Ye JL, 2005, CYBERPSYCHOL BEHAV, V8, P154, DOI 10.1089/cpb.2005.8.154 Yin H, 2015, NEW MEDIA SOC, V17, P556, DOI 10.1177/1461444813505363 NR 49 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 2 U2 34 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC PI THOUSAND OAKS PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA SN 2050-1579 EI 2050-1587 J9 MOB MEDIA COMMUN JI Mob. Media Commun. PD SEP PY 2018 VL 6 IS 3 BP 390 EP 406 DI 10.1177/2050157918763981 PG 17 WC Communication WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication GA GQ8ED UT WOS:000441983000006 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Rebisz, S Grygiel, P AF Rebisz, Slawomir Grygiel, Pawel TI Fears and Difficulties Experienced by Ukrainian Nationals During Their Period of Study in Poland SO EUROPEAN EDUCATION LA English DT Article ID INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; ACCULTURATION; ADJUSTMENT; ABROAD; LONELINESS; ATTITUDES; COLLEGE; PERCEPTIONS; IDENTITY; CULTURE AB The overall aim of this study is to review problems relating to the acculturation of Ukrainian students during their initial period of study abroad in Poland. More importantly, our objective was to recognize the fears and difficulties these students experience and examine the strategies of coping with major stressors. Based on group interviews we identified four themes, which mainly related to the language barrier, social isolation, discrimination, and financial issues. Our results show that the main acculturation strategy among the students in our sample was integration rather than assimilation, marginalization, or separation. Our respondents actively sought contacts with the locals, for example, by giving up their living quarters in the socially isolated and remote university campus and renting shared accommodation in the city, which made it possible for them to maintain closer links with their Ukrainian friends and to receive social support while also staying open to establishing relationships with Poles and having more opportunities to improve their Polish. At the same time, these students maintained their contacts with family and friends abroad through the Internet. 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Educ. PY 2018 VL 50 IS 4 BP 336 EP 352 DI 10.1080/10564934.2017.1364134 PG 17 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA GH1UZ UT WOS:000433189400003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kizgin, H Jamal, A Rana, N Dwivedi, Y Weerakkody, V AF Kizgin, Hatice Jamal, Ahmad Rana, Nripendra Dwivedi, Yogesh Weerakkody, Vishanth TI The impact of social networking sites on socialization and political engagement: Role of acculturation SO TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE LA English DT Article DE Political involvement; Social networking sites; Acculturation orientation; Voting intentions ID STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELS; MEDIA USE; PURCHASE INTENTIONS; FACEBOOK; PARTICIPATION; INFORMATION; INTERNET; NEWS; AGE; COMMUNICATION AB This research examines the extent to which immigrant consumers' use of social networking sites affect their socialization and political engagement in the Netherlands. The study uses self-administered questionnaires to collect data from 514 Turkish-Dutch respondents of various ages, occupations, levels of education and locations in the Netherlands. The study finds that the propensity to share information, the intensity of use, and privacy concerns positively impact socialization on online social networking sites. In addition, a significant positive relationship between socialization and political involvement positively impacts voting intentions. The study also examines the interaction effects of enculturation and acculturation orientations on the relationship between socialization and political involvement. The study's findings point to a positive moderating role of acculturation in this relationship but a negative one for enculturation. The study is the first to investigate simultaneously the drivers of socialization on social networking sites in the context of immigrant consumers and the impact of their socialization on political involvement and voting intention. The research further contributes to the scholarly work by exploring the interaction effects of acculturation and enculturation orientation. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed. C1 [Kizgin, Hatice; Rana, Nripendra; Dwivedi, Yogesh] Swansea Univ, Sch Management, Bay Campus,Fabian Way, Swansea SA1 8EN, W Glam, Wales. [Jamal, Ahmad] Cardiff Univ, Cardiff Business Sch, R36,Aberconway Bldg,Cohan Rd, Cardiff CF10 3EU, S Glam, Wales. [Weerakkody, Vishanth] Univ Bradford, Fac Management & Law, Emm Lane, Bradford BD9 4JL, W Yorkshire, England. C3 Swansea University; Cardiff University; University of Bradford RP Kizgin, H (corresponding author), Swansea Univ, Sch Management, Bay Campus,Fabian Way, Swansea SA1 8EN, W Glam, Wales. 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Forecast. Soc. Chang. PD AUG PY 2019 VL 145 BP 503 EP 512 DI 10.1016/j.techfore.2018.09.010 PG 10 WC Business; Regional & Urban Planning WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics; Public Administration GA IH7IZ UT WOS:000474678600044 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lou, NM Noels, KA Kurl, S Zhang, YSD Young-Leslie, H AF Lou, Nigel Mantou Noels, Kimberly A. Kurl, Shachi Zhang, Ying Shan Doris Young-Leslie, Heather TI Chinese Canadians' Experiences of the Dual Pandemics of COVID-19 and Racism: Implications for Identity, Negative Emotion, and Anti-Racism Incident Reporting SO CANADIAN PSYCHOLOGY-PSYCHOLOGIE CANADIENNE LA English DT Article DE discrimination; identity; threat; COVID; Chinese Canadians ID ETHNIC-IDENTITY; PERCEIVED DISCRIMINATION; REJECTION-IDENTIFICATION; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; STIGMA CONSCIOUSNESS; PERPETUAL FOREIGNER; COPING RESPONSES; UNITED-STATES; SELF-ESTEEM; ACCULTURATION AB Many Chinese Canadians (CCs) have experienced increased racism and xenophobia since the beginning of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. This study focused on how this rise of anti-Chinese discrimination, in addition to the threats posed by the pandemic itself, affects not only CCs' well-being, but also their Chinese and Canadian identities. We surveyed 874 CC adults from across Canada, M (age) = 42.09; 47.7% females; 628 foreign-born, first-generation (G1) and 246 Canadian-born, second or later generation (G2). The reported rates of discriminatory experiences were alarming: More than half of the respondents reported that they had been treated with less respect because of their ethnicity (G1: 60.6%; G2: 56.8%), and over a third reported that they had been personally threatened or intimidated (G1: 35.2%; G2: 39.8%). Generational status moderated CCs' pandemic experiences, such that G1 CCs perceived more health, financial, and cultural threats due to the pandemic, but G2 CCs reported more personal and group discrimination. Perceived discrimination was associated with CCs' negative affect even after controlling for pandemic threats. The type of discrimination had different implications for heritage and mainstream cultural identities. For both groups, personal discrimination was negatively associated with Canadian identity, whereas group discrimination was positively associated with Chinese identity. Only about 10% of CCs who experienced harassment reported their encounters to authorities or on social media; CCs' perceptions that others saw them as perpetual foreigners undermined their reporting of harassment. The findings' implications for acculturation, identity, anti-racism strategies, and empowerment in reporting harassment are discussed. Public Significance Statement COVID-19 pandemic poses various threats for all Canadians, but Chinese Canadians have also faced increased racism. For example, the present study found that two-thirds of respondents had been treated disrespectfully and over a third were openly threatened or harassed during the pandemic. As a result of this discrimination, not only is Chinese Canadians' physical and psychological well-being undermined, but also their sense of belonging to Canadian society. Generational status affected the relative impact of pandemic-related challenges, such that foreign-born Chinese Canadians experienced more health, financial, and cultural threats, whereas Canadian-born Chinese perceived more personal and group discrimination. As the prejudice and discrimination against Chinese Canadians are likely to continue, there are ongoing challenges for research and the community to work together in combating racism, encouraging anti-racism reporting, and supporting Chinese and other Asian Canadians' resilience and recovery from the pandemic. C1 [Lou, Nigel Mantou] Univ Victoria, Dept Psychol, POB 1700 STN CSC, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2, Canada. [Lou, Nigel Mantou] Univ Victoria, Ctr Youth & Soc, Victoria, BC, Canada. [Lou, Nigel Mantou; Noels, Kimberly A.; Zhang, Ying Shan Doris] Univ Alberta, Dept Psychol, Edmonton, AB, Canada. [Kurl, Shachi] Angus Reid Inst, Vancouver, BC, Canada. [Young-Leslie, Heather] Univ Alberta, Dept Anthropol, Edmonton, AB, Canada. C3 University of Victoria; University of Victoria; University of Alberta; University of Alberta RP Lou, NM (corresponding author), Univ Victoria, Dept Psychol, POB 1700 STN CSC, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2, Canada. EM nigellou@uvic.ca RI Noels, Kimberly A./AFG-9019-2022; Lou, Nigel Mantou/ABI-4983-2020; YOUNG-LESLIE, Heather E./G-6183-2015 OI Noels, Kimberly A./0000-0002-9881-4242; Lou, Nigel Mantou/0000-0003-1363-833X; Zhang, Ying Shan Doris/0000-0001-9296-2036; YOUNG-LESLIE, Heather E./0000-0001-7752-7968 FU Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [OV6-170365] FX This study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Operating Grant (OV6-170365) awared to the first and second authors. 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Psychol.-Psychol. Can. PD AUG PY 2022 VL 63 IS 3 BP 279 EP 297 DI 10.1037/cap0000305 EA DEC 2021 PG 19 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA 3I4EI UT WOS:000733064300001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Reijneveld, SA van Nieuwenhuijzen, M Velderman, MK Paulussen, TWGM Junger, M AF Reijneveld, Sijmen A. van Nieuwenhuijzen, Maroesjka Velderman, Mariska Klein Paulussen, Theo W. G. M. Junger, Marianne TI Clustering of health and risk behaviour in immigrant and indigenous Dutch residents aged 19-40 years SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Health behaviours; Delinquency; Clustering; Minority groups; Immigration ID LIFE-STYLE FACTORS; AGGRESSION QUESTIONNAIRE; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; ADULT-POPULATION; REPORTED HEALTH; MENTAL-HEALTH; SMOKING; ACCULTURATION; ADOLESCENTS; NETHERLANDS AB Objectives Studies on the co-occurrence, 'clustering' of health and other risk behaviours among immigrants from non-industrialised countries lack until now. The aim of this study was to compare this clustering in immigrant and indigenous adults. Methods A representative sample (N = 2,982; response 71%) of the Dutch population aged 19-40, with 247 respondents from non-industrialized countries (Turkey, Morocco, Surinam, Netherlands Antilles), was asked about health behaviours (alcohol, smoking, drugs, unsafe sex, exercise, nutrition, sleep behaviour, traffic behaviour), and about rule-breaking behaviour and aggression. Data were collected using internet questionnaires, which excluded respondents unable to read Dutch. Results Among indigenous adults, health and risk behaviours co-occur in three clusters (alcohol, health-enhancing behaviour, and rule-breaking behaviour), whereas among immigrant groups two clusters were found (alcohol and rule-breaking behaviour/smoking). Differences mostly concerned health-enhancing behaviours such as nutrition, which was not part of any cluster, and physical activity. Conclusions This supports an integrated promotion of healthier lifestyles to immigrants who are able to read Dutch. Regarding potentially risky behaviours like alcohol use and rule-breaking behaviours, this could be similar to that for indigenous people. C1 [Reijneveld, Sijmen A.] Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Hlth Sci, NL-9700 AD Groningen, Netherlands. [Reijneveld, Sijmen A.; Velderman, Mariska Klein; Paulussen, Theo W. G. M.] TNO Netherlands Org Appl Sci Res, Leiden, Netherlands. [van Nieuwenhuijzen, Maroesjka] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Clin Child & Family Studies, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [van Nieuwenhuijzen, Maroesjka] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, EMGO Inst Hlth & Care Res, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Junger, Marianne] Univ Twente, Dept Social Risks & Safety Studies, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands. C3 University of Groningen; Netherlands Organization Applied Science Research; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; University of Twente RP Reijneveld, SA (corresponding author), Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Hlth Sci, POB 196, NL-9700 AD Groningen, Netherlands. EM s.a.reijneveld@umcg.nl OI Reijneveld, Sijmen/0000-0002-1206-7523; Klein Velderman, Mariska/0000-0002-5799-7812 FU ZonMw, Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development [4016.0006] FX This study was financially supported by ZonMw, the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (Grant number 4016.0006). 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Public Health PD APR PY 2012 VL 57 IS 2 BP 351 EP 361 DI 10.1007/s00038-012-0350-4 PG 11 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 947RA UT WOS:000304446000012 PM 22371004 OA Green Submitted, hybrid, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Su, C Yang, LX Dong, LY Zhang, WG AF Su, Chang Yang, Lixia Dong, Linying Zhang, Weiguo TI The Psychological Well-Being of Older Chinese Immigrants in Canada amidst COVID-19: The Role of Loneliness, Social Support, and Acculturation SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH LA English DT Article DE social support; loneliness; life satisfaction; psychological well-being; older Chinese immigrants; COVID-19 ID QUALITY-OF-LIFE; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; SATISFACTION; ADULTS; POPULATION; HEALTH; CHICAGO; IMPACT; SCALE; RISK AB This study examined the effects of loneliness, social support, and acculturation on psychological well-being, as indexed by general emotional well-being and life satisfaction, of older Chinese adults living in Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 168 older Chinese adults, recruited via WeChat and the internet, completed an online study through a facilitated Zoom or phone meeting, or through a website link, individually or in a group. The testing package included demographic information, The UCLA Loneliness Scale, The Multidimensional Perceived Social Support Scale, Vancouver Index of Acculturation, The Satisfaction with Life Scale, and The World Health Organization's Five Well-Being Index. The results showed that the psychological well-being (both general emotional well-being and cognitively perceived life satisfaction) was positively predicted by perceived social support but negatively predicted by loneliness. Acculturation was not predictive of both outcomes, and it did not moderate the predictive relationships of social support or loneliness. The results shed light on the importance of community services that target enhancing social support and reducing loneliness in promoting psychological well-being of older Chinese immigrants in Canada amidst and post the pandemic. C1 [Su, Chang; Yang, Lixia] Toronto Metropolitan Univ, Dept Psychol, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada. [Dong, Linying] Toronto Metropolitan Univ, Ted Rogers Sch Informat Technol Management, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada. [Zhang, Weiguo] Univ Toronto, Dept Sociol, Toronto, ON M5S 2J4, Canada. C3 University of Toronto RP Su, C; Yang, LX (corresponding author), Toronto Metropolitan Univ, Dept Psychol, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada. EM sus@brandonu.ca; lixiay@ryerson.ca; ldong@ryerson.ca; weiguo.zhang@utoronto.ca RI zhang, weijun/AAX-3743-2020 OI zhang, weijun/0000-0002-9432-7404; Zhang, Weiguo/0000-0002-8850-5235; Yang, Lixia/0000-0003-2938-8363 FU RBC Immigrant, Diversity, and Inclusion Project; Royal Bank of Canada; [141231] FX This work was funded by the RBC Immigrant, Diversity, and Inclusion Project (Partnership for Change), 2020/2021, awarded to Dr. Lixia Yang and Dr. Linying Dong. The application number for this award is 141231. It is sponsored by the Royal Bank of Canada, administered through the Office of the Vice-president, Research and Innovation (OVPRI) at Ryerson University (now as Toronto Metropolitan University). 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Public Health PD JUL PY 2022 VL 19 IS 14 AR 8612 DI 10.3390/ijerph19148612 PG 12 WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 3J3RO UT WOS:000833315900001 PM 35886464 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Recto, P Champion, JD AF Recto, Pamela Champion, Jane Dimmitt TI Mexican-American adolescents' perceptions about causes of perinatal depression, self-help strategies, and how to obtain mental health information SO JOURNAL OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRIC NURSING LA English DT Article DE Mental health literacy; Mexican-American adolescents; perinatal depression ID POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION; QUALITATIVE DESCRIPTION; MOTHERS; LITERACY; ACCULTURATION; IMMIGRANT; SYMPTOMS; SUPPORT; RISK AB Problem Perinatal depression is a public health concern as it is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. Previous studies have recommended further examination of perinatal depression among Mexican-American adolescents. Thus, the purpose of this study was to understand pregnant and postpartum Mexican-American adolescents' knowledge and beliefs concerning perinatal depression. Methods Findings This qualitative descriptive study examined perceptions about the causes of perinatal depression, self-help strategies, and how to obtain mental health information. Data were analyzed using deductive and inductive qualitative content analysis. A convenience sample, consisiting of 20 pregnant and postpartum adolescents, self-identified as Mexican-Americans, between the ages of 15 and 19 years was interviewed. The quality of relationships with their family and significant other and difficulties in transitioning to motherhood were described as potential causes for depression. Journaling, exercising, and spending time with friends and family were identified as self-help strategies. Healthcare providers, the internet, and mothers who have experienced depression were stated as helpful sources of mental health information. Conclusion An assessment of their psychosocial environment is indicated to identify risk or protective factors for perinatal depression. Its consideration and inclusion in interventions may optimize mental health among perinatal adolescents. C1 [Recto, Pamela; Champion, Jane Dimmitt] Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, 1710 Red River, Austin, TX 78701 USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin RP Recto, P (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, Sch Nursing, 1710 Red River, Austin, TX 78701 USA. EM precto@utexas.edu FU Robert Wood Johnson Foundation FX Robert Wood Johnson Foundation CR Abrams LS, 2009, QUAL HEALTH RES, V19, P535, DOI 10.1177/1049732309332794 Adames H. 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Child Adolesc. Psychiatry Nurs. PD OCT PY 2018 VL 31 IS 2-3 BP 61 EP 69 DI 10.1111/jcap.12210 PG 9 WC Nursing WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Nursing GA GZ6OL UT WOS:000449558200004 PM 30288868 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Sagi, L Bareket-Bojmel, L Tziner, A Icekson, T Mordoch, T AF Sagi, Limor Bareket-Bojmel, Liad Tziner, Aharon Icekson, Tamar Mordoch, Tair TI Social Support and Well-being among Relocating Women: The Mediating Roles of Resilience and Optimism SO JOURNAL OF WORK AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVISTA DE PSICOLOGIA DEL TRABAJO Y DE LAS ORGANIZACIONES LA English DT Article DE Women work relocation; Resilience; Optimism; Well-being ID INTERNATIONAL ASSIGNMENTS; MULTIDIMENSIONAL SCALE; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; CULTURAL-ADAPTATION; SELF-ESTEEM; LIFE; PERSONALITY; DEPRESSION; RESOURCES; INTERNET AB The relative lack of research on the relocation of women to foreign assignments prompted this study that focused on a large online community of women in relocation. We examined the relationship between two support types, perceived social support (PSS) and online support, and well-being measures (meaning in life, depression, and loneliness) in the new setting. Based on the literature, we hypothesized that (a) PSS and online support positively relate to personal resilience and optimism, (b) resilience and optimism positively associate with well-being levels, and (c) resilience and optimism mediate the association between both types of support and well-being. Two waves of data (T1 & T2) were collected in the current study. The results largely reflected the propositions, with some deviations from the expected model, and indicated that resilience was the more prominent mediator at both T1 and T2. A complex pattern of relationships was documented between various types of virtual support and well-being. Women who received social support could foster a positive, optimistic future perspective experience and an increased sense of meaning in their lives. This study engendered implications for organizations' appropriate preparation of relocating staff, in general, and the relocation of women employees, in particular. C1 [Sagi, Limor; Bareket-Bojmel, Liad; Tziner, Aharon; Icekson, Tamar] Peres Acad Ctr, Rehovot, Israel. [Tziner, Aharon] Netanya Acad Ctr, Netanya, Israel. [Icekson, Tamar] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel. [Mordoch, Tair] Me, Tel Aviv, Israel. C3 Ben Gurion University RP Tziner, A (corresponding author), Peres Acad Ctr, Rehovot, Israel.; Tziner, A (corresponding author), Netanya Acad Ctr, Netanya, Israel. 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PD JUL PY 2021 VL 37 IS 2 BP 107 EP 117 DI 10.5093/jwop2021a11 EA JUN 2021 PG 11 WC Psychology, Applied WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA TM3KS UT WOS:000672870100001 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Johnson, O Cho, H Patwary, S AF Johnson, Olivia Cho, Hyojung Patwary, Sarif TI Online shopping orientations of Latino millennial generational cohorts SO JOURNAL OF CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR LA English DT Article ID DECISION-MAKING STYLES; CONSUMERS; GENDER; FASHION; ACCULTURATION; LOYALTY; BRANDS; TRUST; TALE; AGE AB Latino consumers in the United States reached a collective buying power of nearly $1.72 trillion in 2020 with over 22% between the ages of 18 and 37, and 80% of the population on the internet. Although Latino Millennials represent a significant consumer group in the United States, scarce literature has examined their online shopping orientations. Furthermore, despite having indications that Millennials are not a homogenous consumer group, and differ in their shopping preferences, studies fell short in examining the online shopping orientations of the Millennial subgroup. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine the shopping orientations of Latino consumers by segmenting the Millennial generation into three groups: younger Millennial (18-23), middle Millennial (24-30), and older Millennial (31-37). The study administered a web-based questionnaire survey to a convenience sample of 378 participants. A one-way multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) was conducted, and findings revealed that shopping orientations of Latino consumers differ significantly based on Millennial generational cohorts (MGCs) and ethnicity. Among Latino MGCs, younger Millennials were more brand-and fashion-conscious, impulsive, and confused by over choice. Furthermore, Latino Millennials were more brand conscious than Caucasian Millennials. Therefore, companies and marketers that target Latino Millennial consumers should create shopping experiences that meet the needs of the different generational cohorts. C1 [Johnson, Olivia; Patwary, Sarif] Univ Houston, Coll Technol, Dept Human Dev & Consumer Sci, 4730 Calhoun Rd 300, Houston, TX 77204 USA. [Cho, Hyojung] Texas State Univ, Sch Family & Consumer Sci, San Marcos, TX USA. C3 University of Houston System; University of Houston; Texas State University System; Texas State University San Marcos RP Johnson, O (corresponding author), Univ Houston, Coll Technol, Dept Human Dev & Consumer Sci, 4730 Calhoun Rd 300, Houston, TX 77204 USA. 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PD JAN PY 2023 VL 22 IS 1 BP 14 EP 26 DI 10.1002/cb.2107 EA NOV 2022 PG 13 WC Business WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Business & Economics GA 8B1IE UT WOS:000891507800001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Nakamura, N Zea, MC AF Nakamura, Nadine Zea, Maria Cecilia TI Experiences of homonegativity and sexual risk behaviour in a sample of Latino gay and bisexual men SO CULTURE HEALTH & SEXUALITY LA English DT Article DE sexual risk; men who have sex with men; Latino; drug use; homonegativity ID SUBSTANCE USE; MINORITY STRESS; HIV RISK; HEALTH; PREDICTORS; DISCRIMINATION; POPULATIONS; ONLINE; RACISM; MSM AB This study examines the relationship between homonegativity, racism and poverty and HIV-risk-related behaviour among an Internet-based sample of 226 Latino gay and bisexual men. Participants had a median level of education at graduate school level or higher and a median monthly income in the US$1600-2400 range. Income and education in this sample are higher than participants in most other studies of Latino gay and bisexual men, providing information about HIV risk in a previously understudied segment of the population. Three negative binomial regressions were used to predict unprotected receptive anal intercourse, unprotected insertive anal intercourse and unprotected sex under the influence of drugs in the past 30 days, with education, Latino acculturation, income, experiences of racism and homonegativity as predictors. Greater experiences of homonegativity, fewer experiences of racism, lower income and higher Latino acculturation predicted unprotected receptive anal intercourse. Only lower Latino acculturation predicted unprotected insertive anal intercourse. Greater experiences of homonegativity, higher income and higher Latino acculturation predicted unprotected sex under the influence of drugs. This suggests that experiences of homonegativity have a detrimental impact on health behaviours. Future research should aim to further understand the relationship between experiencing homonegativity and engaging in risky sexual behaviour. C1 [Nakamura, Nadine] Simon Fraser Univ, Ctr Appl Res Mental Hlth & Addict, Vancouver, BC, Canada. [Zea, Maria Cecilia] George Washington Univ, Dept Psychol, Washington, DC 20052 USA. C3 Simon Fraser University; George Washington University RP Nakamura, N (corresponding author), Simon Fraser Univ, Ctr Appl Res Mental Hlth & Addict, Vancouver, BC, Canada. 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Health Sex PY 2010 VL 12 IS 1 BP 73 EP 85 AR PII 913440808 DI 10.1080/13691050903089961 PG 13 WC Family Studies; Social Sciences, Biomedical WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Family Studies; Biomedical Social Sciences GA 594FG UT WOS:000277519300006 PM 19637067 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT S AU Hubona, GS Truex, D Wang, JJ Straub, DW AF Hubona, Geoffrey S. Truex, Duane, III Wang, Jijie Straub, Detmar W. BE Galletta, D Zhang, P TI CULTURAL AND GLOBALIZATION ISSUES IMPACTING THE ORGANIZATIONAL USE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SO HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION AND MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS: APPLICATIONS SE Advances in Management Information Systems LA English DT Article; Book Chapter DE Cultural Impacts of Technology; Globalization Issues; Organizational Adoption of IT; Use of IT ID E-MAIL; ACCEPTANCE; DIFFUSION AB Cultural and globalization issues are known to affect the organizational use of information technology (IT). In particular, studies have indicated that a variety of cultural and globalization factors affect the organizational adoption and diffusion of IT. Among sociocultural factors, the differing effects of gender, social norms, beliefs and values, technological acculturation, and degree of technological advancement have all been shown to impact the transfer and use of technology in organizations. Globalization issues also have ramifications with respect to differences in government policy, environmental factors, structural language features, and national economic and IT policies. We sample from the voluminous published literature that reports on cultural and global factors that impact the organizational use of IT. Organizational impacts examined include technology transfer, IT use, adoption and diffusion, systems development, the creation and evolution of standards, and employment practices. Field studies include IT applications in Switzerland, Japan, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, the Sudan, Canada, Denmark, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, and France, as well as other countries, largely as compared with the United States. Some of the specific IT applications examined include the Internet, e-mail, fax, electronic communications media, personal computing, electronic data interchange (EDI) standards, and systems development methods and approaches. Implications for relevant theory and practice are discussed, as are suggestions for future research directions in this domain. C1 [Hubona, Geoffrey S.; Wang, Jijie] Georgia State Univ, Dept Comp & Informat Syst, Atlanta, GA 30303 USA. [Hubona, Geoffrey S.] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Informat Syst, Richmond, VA 23284 USA. [Hubona, Geoffrey S.] Univ Maryland Baltimore Cty, Baltimore, MD 21228 USA. 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Y. Tomyn, Adrian Minas, Harry TI Towards a health promoting university: descriptive findings on health, wellbeing and academic performance amongst university students in Australia SO BMC PUBLIC HEALTH LA English DT Article DE University student; Young person; International student; Mental health; Academic outcomes ID CONNOR-DAVIDSON RESILIENCE; AGE-OF-ONSET; MENTAL-HEALTH; COLLEGE-STUDENTS; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; ADOLESCENT HEALTH; MEDICAL-STUDENTS AB Background: Universities are increasingly recognised as institutions where health and wellbeing can be promoted to maximise academic outcomes, career transitions, and lifelong positive health behaviours. There is concern about the mental health of university students and other factors which affect academic outcomes particularly for subgroups such as international students. There are few cohort studies of the breadth of issues that can impact on mental health and academic outcomes for both local and international students. We conducted a baseline prevalence survey of students at a large Australian university covering health, academic, and social determinants of wellbeing. The purpose was to inform the university's new student health and wellbeing framework with a view to follow-up to determine predictors of mental ill-health and academic outcomes in the subsequent year. In this paper we present the baseline prevalence data and report on selected mental health and health care access issues for local and international students. Methods: The entire university population as of April 2019 of over 56,375 students aged 18 or above were invited to complete the online survey. Questions explored eight domains: demographic characteristics, general health and wellbeing, mental health, risk taking behaviours, psychosocial stressors, learning and academic factors, social and cultural environment, and awareness of and access to health and wellbeing services. Records of academic results were also accessed and matched with survey data for a large subset of students providing consent. Results: Fourteen thousand eight hundred eighty (26.4%) students commenced our survey and were representative of the entire student population on demographic characteristics. Three quarters were aged between 18 to 25 years and one third were international students. Eighty-five percent consented to access of their academic records. Similar proportions of local and international students experienced symptoms of a depression or anxiety disorder, however international students were less aware of and less likely to access available health services both inside and external to the university. We also reported on the prevalence of: general lifestyle factors (diet, exercise, amount of daily sleep); risk-taking behaviours (including alcohol, tobacco and other drug use; unprotected sexual activity); psychosocial stressors (financial, intimate partner violence, discrimination, academic stressors, acculturative stress); subjects failed; resilience; social supports; social media use; and health services accessed online. Conclusions: This rigorous and comprehensive examination of the health status of local and international students in an Australian university student population establishes the prevalence of mental health issues and other psychosocial determinants of health and wellbeing, along with academic performance. This study will inform a university-wide student wellbeing framework to guide health and wellbeing promotion and is a baseline for a 12-month follow-up of the cohort in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. C1 [Sanci, Lena; Williams, Ian; Chondros, Patty; Duncan, Ann-Maree; Tarzia, Laura; Peter, Divya; Lim, Madeleine S. Y.] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Med Sch, Dept Gen Practice, Melbourne, Australia. [Russell, Melissa] Univ Melbourne, Ctr Epidemiol & Biostat, Melbourne Sch Populat & Global Hlth, Melbourne, Australia. [Tomyn, Adrian] Deakin Univ, Sch Psychol, Melbourne, Australia. [Minas, Harry] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sch Populat & Global Hlth, Melbourne, Australia. C3 University of Melbourne; University of Melbourne; Deakin University; University of Melbourne RP Sanci, L (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Med Sch, Dept Gen Practice, Melbourne, Australia. 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Methods: This is a cross-sectional survey. All parents were assessed via self-administered questionnaires. Data were collected through the Internet at the pediatric eye clinics in a tertiary referral eye hospital. Results: In total, 359 parents were included into this survey. The proportion of correctly answered the factual genetic knowledge questionnaire ranged from 35.7% to 81.3%, which is positively correlated to the educational levels and household per capita income. The attitudes toward childhood IEDs genetic testing appeared to be consistent. More factual genetic knowledge was predictive for a favorable attitude toward genetic testing. Han Chinese might be slightly more likely to have a favorable attitude. Interestingly, the higher educational levels and lower monthly incomes were predictive factors for a reserved attitude toward genetic testing. The families without history of IEDs were more inclined to remain a reserved attitude than those with family history of IEDs. Conclusion: This study illustrated that more factual genetic knowledge was considered as an indicator for the favorable attitudes. Therefore, the effective strategies should be taken to provide the correct knowledge of genetics and genetic testing to parents, especially those who need to make an informed decision thereon to undertake childhood genetic testing. C1 [Zhang, Yu; Huang, Sijian; Xiao, Huiming; Ding, Xiaoyan] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Zhongshan Ophthalm Ctr, State Key Lab Ophthalmol, 7 Jinsui Rd, Guangzhou 510060, Peoples R China. C3 Sun Yat Sen University RP Xiao, HM; Ding, XY (corresponding author), Sun Yat Sen Univ, Zhongshan Ophthalm Ctr, State Key Lab Ophthalmol, 7 Jinsui Rd, Guangzhou 510060, Peoples R China. EM xiaohuiming@gzzoc.com; dingxiaoyan@gzzoc.com FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [81700879]; Science and Technology Program Guangzhou, China [201803010031]; Fundamental Research Funds of State Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology, Research Funds of Sun Yat-sen University [15ykjxc22d] FX National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 81700879; Science and Technology Program Guangzhou, China, Grant/Award Number: 201803010031; Fundamental Research Funds of State Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology, Research Funds of Sun Yat-sen University, Grant/Award Number: 15ykjxc22d CR Ahram M, 2015, J GENET COUNS, V24, P1001, DOI 10.1007/s10897-015-9839-3 Armstrong K, 2012, MED CARE, V50, P381, DOI 10.1097/MLR.0b013e31824d748b Calsbeek Hiske, 2007, J Genet Couns, V16, P493, DOI 10.1007/s10897-006-9085-9 Cappelli M, 1999, CLIN GENET, V55, P419, DOI 10.1034/j.1399-0004.1999.550605.x Chen LS, 2013, GENET MED, V15, P274, DOI 10.1038/gim.2012.145 Dominguez-Carral J, 2017, EUR J MED GENET, V60, P124, DOI 10.1016/j.ejmg.2016.11.007 Gilbert C, 2001, B WORLD HEALTH ORGAN, V79, P227 Haga SB, 2013, GENET TEST MOL BIOMA, V17, P327, DOI 10.1089/gtmb.2012.0350 Hann KEJ, 2017, BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, V17, DOI 10.1186/s12889-017-4375-8 Hashemi-Soteh MB, 2019, INT J REPROD BIOMED, V17, P543, DOI 10.18502/ijrm.v17i8.4819 Henneman L, 2004, COMMUNITY GENET, V7, P33, DOI 10.1159/000080302 Jallinoja P, 1999, NEW GENET SOC, V18, P101, DOI 10.1080/14636779908656892 Johnson Helen M, 2011, Med Health R I, V94, P124 Jordan BR, 2010, J MED ETHICS, V36, P440, DOI 10.1136/jme.2009.031385 Morren M, 2007, PATIENT EDUC COUNS, V65, P197, DOI 10.1016/j.pec.2006.07.005 Sussner KM, 2009, PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, V18, P945, DOI 10.1002/pon.1492 Sussner KM, 2009, J GENET COUNS, V18, P60, DOI 10.1007/s10897-008-9182-z Zhang Y, 2019, MOL GENET GENOM MED, V7, DOI 10.1002/mgg3.916 NR 18 TC 1 Z9 1 U1 0 U2 2 PU WILEY PI HOBOKEN PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA SN 2324-9269 J9 MOL GENET GENOM MED JI Mol. Genet. Genom. Med. PD SEP PY 2020 VL 8 IS 9 AR e1402 DI 10.1002/mgg3.1402 PG 8 WC Genetics & Heredity WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC Genetics & Heredity GA NS3GW UT WOS:000572154700049 PM 32662217 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ortiz-Dowling, EM Ananian, CD Larkey, LK Hooker, SP AF Ortiz-Dowling, Evangeline M. Ananian, Cheryl Der Larkey, Linda K. Hooker, Steven P. TI Health-Seeking Behaviors and Health Information Gathering in Older Mexican American Males SO PSYCHOLOGY OF MEN & MASCULINITIES LA English DT Article DE men's health; social ecological model; phenomenology; Mexican American; gerontology ID AFRICAN-AMERICAN; LATINO MEN; ACCULTURATION; GENDER; MACHISMO; ORIGIN; WOMEN; RISK AB Evidence suggests that men's health disparities are linked to attitudes and beliefs toward health promotion and risk reduction, participation in high-risk behaviors, and limited health care access and use influenced by socioeconomic challenges. However, we know less about the specific factors related to health disparities in older Mexican American males. The purpose of this study was to explore the cultural. social, environmental, and gender factors influencing health-seeking behaviors and health information gathering in older Mexican American males. In-depth interviews were conducted with 14 older Mexican American males aged 65-80 years. Based on language preference, interviews were conducted in either Spanish or English. A standardized moderator's guide was used to examine the participant's perceptions of health, maintenance of health, gender influences on health, and sources of men's health information and health promotion programs. Data were collected, organized, and analyzed following the methodology of transcendental phenomenology and the social ecological model. Two major themes related to health-seeking behaviors and health information gathering emerged: (a) top external sources heeded include women, health care providers, and the Internet and (b) men regard inner prompts for self-determined self-care. Future research should consider these external sources and inner prompts when developing targeted health promotion interventions, such as physical activity programs, with older Mexican American males. C1 [Ortiz-Dowling, Evangeline M.] Univ Arizona, Coll Nursing, 1305 North Martin Ave,POB 210203, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. [Ananian, Cheryl Der] Arizona State Univ, Coll Hlth Solut, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Larkey, Linda K.] Arizona State Univ, Coll Nursing & Hlth Innovat, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Hooker, Steven P.] Arizona State Univ, Sch Nutr & Hlth Promot, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA. [Hooker, Steven P.] San Diego State Univ, Coll Hlth & Iluman Serv, San Diego, CA 92182 USA. C3 University of Arizona; Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; California State University System; San Diego State University RP Ortiz-Dowling, EM (corresponding author), Univ Arizona, Coll Nursing, 1305 North Martin Ave,POB 210203, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA. EM dowling@email.arizona.edu RI Ortiz-Dowling, Evangeline M./AAB-6894-2021; Der Ananian, Cheryl/AAB-6893-2021 OI Hooker, Steven/0000-0001-9969-6244; Dowling, Evangeline/0000-0001-8897-5811 CR Adler N.E., 2016, ADDRESSING SOCIAL DE, DOI 10.31478/201609t Aguirre-Molina M, 2010, HLTH ISSUES LATINO M Ailinger R L, 1989, J Community Health Nurs, V6, P113, DOI 10.1207/s15327655jchn0602_7 Apesoa-Varano EC, 2015, AM J GERIAT PSYCHIAT, V23, P960, DOI 10.1016/j.jagp.2014.12.006 Arciniega GM, 2008, J COUNS PSYCHOL, V55, P19, DOI 10.1037/0022-0167.55.1.19 Baker P, 2018, PHYS THER REV, V23, P144, DOI 10.1080/10833196.2018.1452562 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2013, STAT AG HLTH AM 2013 Centers for Disease Control Prevention and Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, 2019, COST CONS Courtenay W. H, 2011, DYING BE MEN PSYCHOS, DOI [10.4324/9780203853245, DOI 10.4324/9780203853245] Creswell J. W., 2016, QUALITATIVE INQUIRY, DOI DOI 10.1089/TMJ.2009.0067 Creswell J. 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Men Masculinities PD OCT PY 2019 VL 20 IS 4 BP 564 EP 574 DI 10.1037/men0000194 PG 11 WC Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA IV2PK UT WOS:000484118900010 OA Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Sin, SCJ Kim, KS AF Sin, Sei-Ching Joanna Kim, Kyung-Sun TI International students' everyday life information seeking: The informational value of social networking sites SO LIBRARY & INFORMATION SCIENCE RESEARCH LA English DT Article ID GRADUATE-STUDENTS; UNITED-STATES; PERSONALITY; ADJUSTMENT; FACEBOOK; ACCULTURATION; BEHAVIOR; INTERNET; GENDER; COMMUNICATION AB Sojourns to other countries, such as for studying abroad, are increasingly common. However, adjusting to life in a different country can be stressful and require significant effort. Sojourners need to not only maintain and expand their social networks, but they also continuously seek information about their new environment. While international students are a sizable group, their daily information behavior is not well understood. This study posits that social networking sites (SNS), such as Facebook, may play an important role in international students' everyday life information seeking (ELIS). Using descriptive statistics, ANOVA, and structural equation modeling (SEM), the study analyzed international students' everyday life information needs, their usage of SNS for ELIS, and the relationships among demographics, personality traits, SNS usage, and perceived usefulness of the acquired everyday life information. Findings indicate that a majority of the respondents frequently used SNS for ELIS. Younger students, undergraduates, and extroverts were more likely to use SNS for ELIS, while no gender difference was found. Notably, among the nine user characteristics and behavior factors, SNS usage emerged as the only positive predictor of perceived usefulness of acquired information in meeting daily needs. This indicates that SNS serve as a valuable channel for purposeful everyday life information seeking. Beyond its social support value, the ELIS value of SNS is a fruitful area for future research. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. C1 [Sin, Sei-Ching Joanna] Nanyang Technol Univ, Div Informat Studies, Wee Kim Wee Sch Commun & Informat, WKWSCI 05 07, Singapore 637718, Singapore. [Kim, Kyung-Sun] Univ Wisconsin, Sch Lib & Informat Studies, Madison, WI 53706 USA. C3 Nanyang Technological University & National Institute of Education (NIE) Singapore; Nanyang Technological University; University of Wisconsin System; University of Wisconsin Madison RP Sin, SCJ (corresponding author), Nanyang Technol Univ, Div Informat Studies, Wee Kim Wee Sch Commun & Informat, WKWSCI 05 07, 31 Nanyang Link, Singapore 637718, Singapore. 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TI Mediation Effects of a Culturally Generic Substance Use Prevention Program for Asian American Adolescents SO ASIAN AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE Asian Americans; adolescents; Internet; universal prevention; family-based program ID CIGARETTE-SMOKING; ALCOHOL-USE; ISLANDER ADOLESCENTS; DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS; CHINESE-AMERICANS; ETHNIC-MINORITIES; FAMILIES PROGRAM; 2-YEAR OUTCOMES; RISK-FACTORS; DRUG-USE AB We examined the mediation effects of a family-based substance use prevention program on a sample of Asian American families. These families were randomized into an intervention arm or a nonintervention control arm. Using path models, we assessed the effect of the intervention on adolescent girls' substance use outcomes at 2-year follow-up through family relationships and adolescent self-efficacy pathways. Bias-corrected bootstrapping strategy was employed to assess the significance of the mediation effect by evaluating the 95% confidence interval of the standardized coefficient. The results showed that receiving the intervention exerted a positive effect on girls' family relationships at 1-year follow-up. Such an improvement was associated with girls' increased self-efficacy, which in turn led to girls' decreased alcohol use, marijuana use, and future intention to use substances at 2-year follow-up. Considering the diverse cultural backgrounds, as well as languages, nationalities, and acculturation levels under the umbrella term Asian Americans, we demonstrate that a universal Web-based intervention that tackles the theoretical-and empirical-based risk and protective factors can be effective for Asian Americans. 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PD JUN PY 2014 VL 5 IS 2 SI SI BP 116 EP 125 DI 10.1037/a0035928 PG 10 WC Ethnic Studies; Psychology, Multidisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Ethnic Studies; Psychology GA AJ7XS UT WOS:000337915400005 PM 25505939 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kline, SL Liu, F AF Kline, SL Liu, F TI The influence of comparative media use on acculturation, acculturative stress, and family relationships of Chinese international students SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS LA English DT Article DE international students; email; family communication; acculturative stress; long-distance relationships ID SEPARATION-INDIVIDUATION; PARENTAL ATTACHMENT; ADJUSTMENT; COLLEGE; INTERNET; COMMUNICATION; CYBERSPACE; IDENTITY; SCALE; MAIL AB The purpose of the study was to explore the media use and relational communication practices Chinese international students use to maintain their family relationships, and the association of these practices to acculturation, stress, and family cohesion. The media use and communication practices of Chinese international students studying at a large US university were analyzed. Consistent with media niche theory, Chinese students preferred to use and did use the telephone more often than email to contact family members. In comparison to email, they used the telephone to communicate with family more often per week, covered a greater diversity of conversation topics, used a greater number of relational maintenance themes, and had a greater level of openness in their communicative exchanges. Gender, phone contacts per week and email topic diversity predicted students' acculturative stress levels, while phone topic diversity and open phone communication predicted acculturation level. Open phone and email communication predicted family cohesion. Consistencies in particular topics and relational message themes were also discovered, with similar relational message themes occurring in email as well as in the telephone context. However, that a greater variety of topics and relational message themes were used in the telephone than in the email context supports the idea that phone conversations may more likely be used to convey emotional information than email. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. C1 Ohio State Univ, Sch Commun, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. C3 University System of Ohio; Ohio State University RP Kline, SL (corresponding author), Ohio State Univ, Sch Commun, 3016 Derby Hall,154 N Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210 USA. 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J. Intercult. Relat. PD JUL PY 2005 VL 29 IS 4 BP 367 EP 390 DI 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2005.07.001 PG 24 WC Psychology, Social; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Sociology WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Social Sciences - Other Topics; Sociology GA 973JO UT WOS:000232518900001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Drori, I Wrzesniewski, A Ellis, S AF Drori, Israel Wrzesniewski, Amy Ellis, Shmuel TI CULTURAL CLASHES IN A "MERGER OF EQUALS": THE CASE OF HIGH-TECH START-UPS SO HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT LA English DT Article DE merger of equals; equality; cultural clash; cultural construction; practices of equality ID ACQUISITION PERFORMANCE; ACCULTURATION; IDENTITY; IDENTIFICATION; ORGANIZATIONS; INTEGRATION; AMBIGUITY; ISSUES; MEDIA; MODEL AB Mergers of equals are often considered simply symbolic. Whereas existing literature on the topic views equality as underscoring the importance of distributive justice, power, or identity, the role of culture remains relatively obscure. In this study, the authors explore equality as a dynamic construct associated with two major processes in mergers of equals: cultural clash and cultural construction. The authors employ a qualitative case study with interviews and analysis of company materials from Broad Band, a wireless Internet access provider, to address the role of culture and equality in mergers and acquisitions (M&A). The results shed light on how and why social actors entering into mergers may enact a culture of equality. First, firms may develop new aspirations and patterns of appreciation and initiate practices and strategies that construct equality as an integral part of the merger. Second, when distributive equality becomes a liability, it incites change. In the context of equality, this change results in strategic action that transforms the meaning of "a merger of equals" to a more practical, pragmatic, and integrative equality, which takes into account the interests and the needs of the merged firm. Third, contrary to the common skeptical and cynical portrayal of mergers of equals, this study found equality to be a crucial factor during postmerger integration. (C) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. C1 [Drori, Israel] Univ Michigan, Dept Management & Org, Ross Sch Business, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. [Wrzesniewski, Amy] Yale Univ, Yale Sch Management, New Haven, CT 06520 USA. [Ellis, Shmuel] Tel Aviv Univ, Leon Recanati Grad Sch Business Adm, Tel Aviv, Israel. C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; Yale University; Tel Aviv University RP Drori, I (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Dept Management & Org, Ross Sch Business, 701 Tappan St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA. 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Resour. Manage. PD SEP-OCT PY 2011 VL 50 IS 5 SI SI BP 625 EP 649 DI 10.1002/hrm.20446 PG 25 WC Psychology, Applied; Management WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Business & Economics GA 827JR UT WOS:000295425300005 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lorenzo-Blanco, EI Arillo-Santillan, E Unger, JB Thrasher, J AF Lorenzo-Blanco, Elma I. Arillo-Santillan, Edna Unger, Jennifer B. Thrasher, James TI Remote Acculturation and Cigarette Smoking Susceptibility Among Youth in Mexico SO JOURNAL OF CROSS-CULTURAL PSYCHOLOGY LA English DT Article DE remote acculturation; cigarette smoking susceptibility; adolescents; Mexico ID LINGUISTIC ACCULTURATION; EARLY ADOLESCENTS; PLANNED BEHAVIOR; SUBSTANCE USE; TOBACCO USE; CULTURE; GENDER; SCALE; VALIDATION; ATTITUDES AB Many adolescents in majority world countries emulate U.S. American culture, which can influence their development. Globalization allows adolescents from majority world countries to learn about U.S. American culture through mass media and the exchange of information via the Internet and other forms of communication. As such, youth in Mexico may experience remote acculturation, which can influence their smoking behaviors. We developed and tested a measure of remote acculturation (i.e., orientation to U.S. American and Mexican culture) among adolescents in Mexico and examined the association of remote acculturation with adolescents' smoking-related cognitions. Data came from a school-based survey of 5,492 never-smoker, urban adolescents (51% female, M age = 14.07 years). Confirmatory factor analyses supported two latent factors-one for U.S. American and another for Mexican cultural orientation. Structural equation models revealed that stronger Mexican cultural orientation was associated with lower positive smoking-related attitudes, which were related with lower smoking susceptibility. Consistent with research on acculturation among U.S. Hispanic youth, findings indicate that stronger orientation toward U.S. culture may put adolescents in Mexico at risk of cigarette smoking, whereas greater orientation toward Mexican culture may prevent youth smoking in Mexico. We discuss directions for future research and policy-making strategies to prevent youth smoking in Mexico. C1 [Lorenzo-Blanco, Elma I.] Univ Texas Austin, Austin, TX 78712 USA. [Arillo-Santillan, Edna] Inst Nacl Salud Publ, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico. [Unger, Jennifer B.] Univ Southern Calif, Los Angeles, CA USA. [Thrasher, James] Univ South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208 USA. C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica; University of Southern California; University of South Carolina System; University of South Carolina Columbia RP Lorenzo-Blanco, EI (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, Dept Human Dev & Family Sci, 108 East Dean Keeton St,A2702, Austin, TX 78712 USA. EM elma@utexas.edu RI Thrasher, James F/E-6423-2010 OI Unger, Jennifer/0000-0001-9064-6603 FU National Institute of Health/Fogarty International Center [3R01TW009274-04S1] FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Preparation of this article was supported by the National Institute of Health/Fogarty International Center (Grant # 3R01TW009274-04S1). 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Cross-Cult. Psychol. PD JAN PY 2019 VL 50 IS 1 BP 63 EP 79 DI 10.1177/0022022118807578 PG 17 WC Psychology, Social WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology GA HF3MK UT WOS:000454139000006 PM 31223173 OA Green Accepted, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Palmer, SM Winham, DM Hradek, C AF Palmer, Shelly M. Winham, Donna M. Hradek, Christine TI Knowledge Gaps of the Health Benefits of Beans among Low-Income Women SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE legumes; Hispanics; acculturation; chronic disease; nutrition education; health disparities; health information ID RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIALS; VEGETABLE CONSUMPTION; PULSE CONSUMPTION; SELF-EFFICACY; HEART-DISEASE; DIETARY FIBER; RISK; ACCULTURATION; FRUIT; METAANALYSIS AB Objectives: We determined knowledge of the health benefits of consuming beans, and assessed if awareness varied by acculturation status among Hispanic and non-Hispanic low-income women. Methods: We used a self-administered survey with Iowa women aged 18-65 years who were eligible to receive income-based services through 2 healthcare clinics, a WIC clinic, and Extension Outreach. Chi-square and ANOVA were used to compare bean health benefit knowledge, demographics, health-risk factors, nutrition information seeking, and self-efficacy by acculturation categories. Results: Of the 158 women who completed the survey, 58% were Hispanic, with a mean age of 36 years. In terms of acculturation, 24% were Hispanic-dominant, 30% bicultural, and 46% English dominant. Over 50% of all respondents did not know bean consumption lowered cholesterol, aided blood glucose control, or reduced some cancer risks. Responses for 5 of 7 knowledge statements differed significantly by acculturation. Hispanic-dominant and bicultural women reported significantly better health, higher bean consumption, and less cigarette smoking than English-dominant women. Bicultural and English-dominant women were more likely to use the Internet for nutrition information. Conclusions: There are knowledge gaps about the health benefits of bean consumption among low-income women. Nutrition education to improve their knowledge may lead to increased bean consumption, reducing health disparities and improving nutrition. C1 [Palmer, Shelly M.; Winham, Donna M.] Iowa State Univ, Dept Food Sci & Human Nutr, Ames, IA 50011 USA. [Hradek, Christine] Iowa State Univ, Cooperat Extens, Human Sci Extens & Outreach, Ames, IA USA. C3 Iowa State University; Iowa State University RP Winham, DM (corresponding author), Iowa State Univ, Dept Food Sci & Human Nutr, Ames, IA 50011 USA. EM dwinham@iastate.edu RI Winham, Donna/B-2091-2014 OI Winham, Donna/0000-0003-3924-2560 CR Abdullah MMH, 2015, FRONT PHARMACOL, V6, DOI 10.3389/fphar.2015.00167 Abraido-Lanza AF, 2005, SOC SCI MED, V61, P1243, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2005.01.016 [Anonymous], 2016, USDA NAT NUTR DAT ST [Anonymous], 2018, STAT DIAB [Anonymous], 2014, NFANT CHILD ADOLESC, DOI DOI 10.1177/1941406413520323 [Anonymous], 2018, DISCOVERING STAT USI [Anonymous], 2008, HISPANICS HLTH CARE Armstrong Florian TL, 2014, J NUTR EDUC BEHAV, V46, pS170 Beech BM, 1999, J ADOLESCENT HEALTH, V24, P244, DOI 10.1016/S1054-139X(98)00108-6 Block G, 2000, AM J PREV MED, V18, P284, DOI 10.1016/S0749-3797(00)00119-7 Darmadi-Blackberry I, 2004, ASIA PAC J CLIN NUTR, V13, P217 Darmon N, 2008, AM J CLIN NUTR, V87, P1107, DOI 10.1093/ajcn/87.5.1107 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, 2010, REP DIET GUID ADV CO Guntzviller L, 2016, J IMMIGR MINOR HEALT, V2, P489 Ha V, 2014, CAN MED ASSOC J, V186, pE252, DOI 10.1503/cmaj.131727 Havemeier S, 2017, ANN NY ACAD SCI, V1392, P58, DOI 10.1111/nyas.13308 Hernandez-Garbanzo Y, 2013, DIET QUALITY, P199 Hutchins AM, 2012, BRIT J NUTR, V108, pS52, DOI 10.1017/S0007114512000761 KEYS A, 1986, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V124, P903, DOI 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a114480 Kim SJ, 2016, AM J CLIN NUTR, V103, P1213, DOI 10.3945/ajcn.115.124677 Lanza E, 2006, J NUTR, V136, P1896, DOI 10.1093/jn/136.7.1896 Luszczynska A, 2007, HEALTH EDUC RES, V22, P630, DOI 10.1093/her/cyl133 Marin G, 1996, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V18, P297, DOI 10.1177/07399863960183002 Martinez AD, 2013, ETHNIC HEALTH, V18, P115, DOI 10.1080/13557858.2012.698254 Mattei J, 2014, HEALTH BEHAV POLICY, V1, P38, DOI 10.14485/HBPR.1.1.5 McCrory MA, 2010, ADV NUTR, V1, P17, DOI 10.3945/an.110.1006 Messina V, 2014, AM J CLIN NUTR, V100, p437S, DOI 10.3945/ajcn.113.071472 Mitchell DC, 2009, J AM DIET ASSOC, V109, P909, DOI 10.1016/j.jada.2009.02.029 Mosca L, 2004, CIRCULATION, V109, P573, DOI 10.1161/01.CIR.0000115222.69428.C9 National Institutes of Health, 2014, HLTH INF NAT TRENDS Purdue University, EXP FOOD NUTR ED PRO SABOGAL F, 1989, HISPANIC J BEHAV SCI, V11, P136, DOI 10.1177/07399863890112003 Slawson DL, 2013, J ACAD NUTR DIET, V113, P972, DOI 10.1016/j.jand.2013.05.005 Smith WE, 2005, J AM DIET ASSOC, V105, P404, DOI 10.1016/j.jada.2004.12.005 State Data Center of Iowa/A program of the state library of Iowa, 2016, LAT IN IOW Tach L, 2015, J URBAN HEALTH, V92, P815, DOI 10.1007/s11524-015-9984-x Thompson SV, 2012, NUTR J, V11, DOI 10.1186/1475-2891-11-23 Thorn B, 2015, WIC FOOD PACKAGES PO Torres-Aguilar P, 2016, J IMMIGR MINOR HEALT, V18, P652, DOI 10.1007/s10903-015-0212-2 United States Census Bureau, QUICKF US IOW US Department of Health and Human Services, DIET GUID AM Valdivia C, 2008, AM J AGR ECON, V90, P1319, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8276.2008.01224.x Winham DM, 2007, J AM COLL NUTR, V26, P243, DOI 10.1080/07315724.2007.10719607 Winham DM, 2016, PLOS ONE, V11, DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0147592 Winham DM, 2010, J HUNGER ENVIRON NUT, V5, P498, DOI 10.1080/19320248.2010.527280 Yoo-Lee E, 2016, REF SERV REV, V44, P85, DOI 10.1108/RSR-02-2016-0015 NR 46 TC 8 Z9 8 U1 0 U2 6 PU PNG PUBLICATIONS PI OAK RIDGE PA 2205-K OAK RIDGE RD, #115, OAK RIDGE, NC 27310 USA SN 1945-7359 J9 AM J HEALTH BEHAV JI Am. J. Health Behav. PD JAN PY 2018 VL 42 IS 1 BP 27 EP 38 DI 10.5993/AJHB.42.1.3 PG 12 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA FY2JC UT WOS:000426640300003 PM 29320336 OA Green Published, hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Martin, CL Tate, DF Schaffner, A Brannen, A Hatley, KE Diamond, M Munoz-Christian, K Pomeroy, J Sanchez, T Mercado, A Hagobian, T Phelan, S AF Martin, Chantel L. Tate, Deborah F. Schaffner, Andrew Brannen, Anna Hatley, Karen Erickson Diamond, Molly Munoz-Christian, Karen Pomeroy, Jeremy Sanchez, Teresa Mercado, Adrian Hagobian, Todd Phelan, Suzanne TI Acculturation Influences Postpartum Eating, Activity, and Weight Retention in Low-Income Hispanic Women SO JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH LA English DT Article DE acculturation; postpartum weight retention; diet; physical activity; health disparities; obesity ID PREGNANCY-RELATED WEIGHT; UNITED-STATES; ETHNICALLY DIVERSE; RISK-FACTORS; GAIN; OBESITY; US; RESIDENCE; OUTCOMES AB Background: Low-income Hispanic women experience elevated rates of high postpartum weight retention (PPWR), which is an independent risk factor for lifetime obesity. Sociocultural factors might play an important role among Hispanic women; however, very few studies have examined this association. Objective: The purpose of our study was to examine the associations between acculturation and maternal diet, physical activity, and PPWR. Design: This is a cross-sectional study of baseline data from 282 Hispanic women participating in the FitMoms/Mamas Activas study, a randomized controlled trial examining the impact of primarily an internet-based weight control program, in reducing PPWR among low-income women. We performed multivariable linear regression to examine the association of acculturation with diet quality, physical activity, and PPWR at study entry. Results: A total of 213 (76%) women had acculturation scores reflecting Mexican orientation or bicultural orientation, whereas 69 (24%) had scores that represented assimilation to Anglo culture. Women who were more acculturated had lower intakes of fruits and vegetables, lower HEI scores, and lower physical activity levels than women who were less acculturated (p<0.05). We found an association between acculturation and PPWR in that for every 1-unit increase in acculturation score, PPWR increased, on average, by 0.80kg. Conclusion: Higher acculturation was associated with poorer diet and physical activity behaviors and greater PPWR. C1 [Martin, Chantel L.; Tate, Deborah F.; Hatley, Karen Erickson; Diamond, Molly] Univ N Carolina, Dept Hlth Behav, Chapel Hill, NC USA. [Tate, Deborah F.] Univ N Carolina, Dept Nutr, Chapel Hill, NC USA. [Schaffner, Andrew] Calif Polytech State Univ San Luis Obispo, Dept Stat, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407 USA. [Brannen, Anna; Sanchez, Teresa; Mercado, Adrian; Hagobian, Todd; Phelan, Suzanne] Calif Polytech State Univ San Luis Obispo, Dept Kinesiol, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407 USA. [Munoz-Christian, Karen] Calif Polytech State Univ San Luis Obispo, Dept Modern Languages, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407 USA. [Pomeroy, Jeremy] Marshfield Clin Hlth Syst, Marshfield Clin Res Fdn, Marshfield, WI USA. C3 University of North Carolina; University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; University of North Carolina; University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; California State University System; California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo; California State University System; California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo; California State University System; California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo RP Martin, CL (corresponding author), Univ N Carolina, Gillings Sch Global Publ Hlth, 324 Rosenau Hall,CB 7440, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA. EM chantelmartin@unc.edu OI Phelan, Suzanne/0000-0003-2260-0499; Schaffner, Andrew/0000-0002-7413-0153 FU National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive Kidney Diseases [KD087889]; National Cancer Institute's Cancer Health Disparities Training Program [T32CA128582] FX This study was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive Kidney Diseases (KD087889) and the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Health Disparities Training Program (T32CA128582). The participation of the 12 WIC programs (six in Santa Barbara County, four in San Luis Obispo County, and two in Ventura County) is greatly appreciated. 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Womens Health PD DEC PY 2017 VL 26 IS 12 BP 1333 EP 1339 DI 10.1089/jwh.2016.6154 PG 7 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Medicine, General & Internal; Obstetrics & Gynecology; Women's Studies WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; General & Internal Medicine; Obstetrics & Gynecology; Women's Studies GA FQ0OL UT WOS:000418056500011 PM 28816589 OA Green Published, Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Strang, JF McClellan, LS Raaijmakers, D Caplan, R Klomp, SE Reutter, M Lai, MC Song, M Gratton, FV Dale, LK Schutte, A de Vries, ALC Gardiner, F Edwards-Leeper, L Minnaard, AL Eleveld, NL Corbin, E Purkis, Y Lawson, W Kim, D van Wieringen, IM Rodriguez-Roldan, VM Harris, MC Wilks, MF Abraham, G Balleur-van Rijn, A Brown, LXZ Forshaw, A Wilks, GB Griffin, AD Graham, EK Krause, S Pervez, N Bok, IA Song, A Fischbach, AL van der Miesen, AIR AF Strang, John F. McClellan, Lucy S. Raaijmakers, Daphne Caplan, Reid Klomp, Sascha E. Reutter, Mindy Lai, Meng-Chuan Song, Minneh Gratton, Finn, V Dale, Laura K. Schutte, Anouschka de Vries, Annelou L. C. Gardiner, Finn Edwards-Leeper, Laura Minnaard, Amelie Lune Eleveld, Niki Lou Corbin, Endever Purkis, Yenn Lawson, Wenn Kim, Da-Young van Wieringen, Isa M. Rodriguez-Roldan, Victoria M. Harris, Marvel C. Wilks, Madeline F. Abraham, Gee Balleur-van Rijn, Anouk Brown, Lydia X. Z. Forshaw, Alexandra Wilks, Gary B. Griffin, April Dawn Graham, Elizabeth K. Krause, Sandy Pervez, Noor Bok, Inge A. Song, Amber Fischbach, Abigail L. van der Miesen, Anna I. R. TI The Gender-Diversity and Autism Questionnaire: A Community-Developed Clinical, Research, and Self-Advocacy Tool for Autistic Transgender and Gender-Diverse Young Adults SO AUTISM IN ADULTHOOD LA English DT Article DE autism; autistic; adult; gender diverse; transgender; nonbinary ID MENTAL-HEALTH; SPECTRUM DISORDERS; CARE; EXPERIENCES; PRIORITIES; INTERVIEW; VERSION; PEOPLE AB Background: Autistic transgender people face unique risks in society, including inequities in accessing needed care and related mental health disparities. Given the need for specific and culturally responsive accommodations/supports, the characterization of key experiences, challenges, needs, and resilience factors within this population is imperative. This study developed a structured self-report tool for autistic transgender young adults to communicate their experiences and needs in a report format attuned to common autistic thinking and communication styles.Methods: This cross-nation project developed and refined the Gender-Diversity and Autism Questionnaire through an iterative community-based approach using Delphi panel methodology. This proof-of-principle project defined "expertise" broadly, employing a multi-input expert search approach to balance academic-, community-, and lived experience-based expertise.Results: The expert collaborators (N = 24 respondents) completed a two-round Delphi study, which developed 85 mostly closed-ended items based on 90% consensus. Final item content falls within six topic areas: the experience of identities; the impact of experienced or anticipated discrimination, bias, and violence toward autistic people and transgender people; tasks and experiences of everyday life; gender diversity- or autism-related care needs and history; the experience of others doubting an individual's gender identity and/or autism; and the experience of community and connectedness. The majority of retained items relate to tasks and experiences of everyday life or the impact of experienced or anticipated discrimination, bias, and violence.Conclusions: This study employed a multipronged multimodal search approach to maximize equity in representation of the expert measure development team. The resulting instrument, designed for clinical, research, and self-advocacy applications, has parallel Dutch and English versions and is available for immediate use. Future cross-cultural research with this instrument could help identify contextual risk and resilience factors to better understand and address inequities faced by this large intersectional population. Community brief Why is this an important issue?Transgender and gender-diverse are words used to describe people whose gender varies from their assigned sex at birth. Many autistic people identify as being transgender/gender-diverse. Autistic gender-diverse/transgender young adults often describe difficulties getting the care they need, which can increase their chances of experiencing stress and mental health challenges. This study created a self-report questionnaire for autistic transgender/gender-diverse young adults to share about their health care, support needs, and broader experiences. What were the results of the study?A diverse group of experts in the autism and gender diversity co-occurrence, including autistic transgender people, worked together to develop the questionnaire. The researchers found experts by searching the internet and talking to people in the community and research field. The questionnaire is called the Gender-Diversity and Autism Questionnaire and has 85 questions that are grouped into 6 different areas: the experience of identities; the impact of experienced or anticipated discrimination, bias, and violence toward autistic people and transgender people; tasks and experiences of everyday life; gender diversity- or autism-related care needs and history; the experience of others doubting an individual's gender identity and/or autism; and the experience of community and connectedness. The questionnaire has English and Dutch versions so it can be used for research in different countries. What do the authors recommend for future research on this topic?Researchers are currently using the new questionnaire to compare the experiences and needs of autistic transgender young adults in the Netherlands and the United States. The results may help explain why some outcomes are different between autistic transgender young people in the two countries and how culture and society play a role. How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?We created the questionnaire to be used in different settings, including clinics and in research. The questionnaire gives autistic transgender young adults a structured way to communicate their experiences, needs, challenges, and areas of strength. The answers that an autistic transgender young adult gives on the questionnaire could help other people understand the clinical and community supports that the young adult wants and needs. Future studies may use the questionnaire to understand obstacles that autistic transgender young adults may face. C1 [Strang, John F.; McClellan, Lucy S.; Song, Minneh; Song, Amber; Fischbach, Abigail L.] Childrens Natl Hosp, Ctr Neurosci, Gender & Autism Program, Washington, DC USA. [Strang, John F.] George Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Washington, DC 20052 USA. [Strang, John F.] George Washington Univ, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Sch Med, Washington, DC 20052 USA. [Raaijmakers, Daphne; van Wieringen, Isa M.] Vrije Univ, Amsterdam Univ, Ctr Expertise Gender Dysphoria, Dept Med Psychol,Med Ctr, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Raaijmakers, Daphne; van der Miesen, Anna I. R.] Vrije Univ, Amsterdam Univ, Ctr Expertise Gender Dysphoria, Dept Child & Adolescent Psychiat,Med Ctr, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Caplan, Reid] Brandeis Univ, Waltham, MA USA. [Reutter, Mindy] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Social & Behav Sci, New Haven, CT USA. [Lai, Meng-Chuan] Hosp Sick Children, Ctr Addict & Mental Hlth, Child & Youth Mental Hlth Collaborat, Toronto, ON, Canada. [Lai, Meng-Chuan] Univ Toronto, Temerty Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON, Canada. [Lai, Meng-Chuan] Univ Cambridge, Autism Res Ctr, Dept Psychiat, Cambridge, England. [Lai, Meng-Chuan] Natl Taiwan Univ Hosp & Coll Med, Dept Psychiat, Taipei, Taiwan. [de Vries, Annelou L. C.; Gardiner, Finn] Autist People Color Fund, Lincoln, NE USA. [Edwards-Leeper, Laura] Pacific Univ, Sch Profess Psychol, Hillsboro, OR USA. [Corbin, Endever] AutChat, Portland, OR USA. [Lawson, Wenn] Univ Birmingham, Dept Disabil Inclus & Special Needs, Birmingham, W Midlands, England. [Lawson, Wenn] Macquarie Univ, Sydney, NSW, Australia. [Lawson, Wenn] Curtin Univ, Curtin Autism Res Grp, Perth, WA, Australia. [Kim, Da-Young] Brown Univ, Providence, RI USA. [van Wieringen, Isa M.] Univ Amsterdam, Dept Clin Psychol, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [van Wieringen, Isa M.] Univ Amsterdam, Dept Dev Psychol, Amsterdam, Netherlands. [Rodriguez-Roldan, Victoria M.] GLSEN, New York, NY USA. [Balleur-van Rijn, Anouk] Parnassia Psychiat Inst, The Hague, Netherlands. [Brown, Lydia X. Z.] Georgetown Univ, Disabil Studies Program, Washington, DC USA. [Brown, Lydia X. Z.] Autist Women & Nonbinary Network, Lincoln, NE USA. [Forshaw, Alexandra] Flow Observ, Portsmouth, Hants, England. [Graham, Elizabeth K.] Arc US Natl Council Self Advocates, Washington, DC USA. [Krause, Sandy] Wisconsin Autism Empowerment, Milwaukee, WI USA. [Pervez, Noor] Autist Self Advocacy Network, Washington, DC USA. C3 Children's National Health System; George Washington University; George Washington University; University of Amsterdam; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; University of Amsterdam; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Brandeis University; Yale University; University of Toronto; Centre for Addiction & Mental Health - Canada; Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids); University of Toronto; University of Cambridge; National Taiwan University; National Taiwan University Hospital; Pacific University; University of Birmingham; Macquarie University; Curtin University; Brown University; University of Amsterdam; University of Amsterdam; Parnassia Psychiatric Institute; Georgetown University RP Strang, JF (corresponding author), George Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pediat, Washington, DC 20052 USA.; Strang, JF (corresponding author), George Washington Univ, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Sch Med, Washington, DC 20052 USA.; Strang, JF (corresponding author), Childrens Natl Hosp, Gender & Autism Program, 15245 Shady Grove Rd,Suite 350, Rockville, MD 20850 USA. EM jstrang@childrensnational.org FU Organization for Autism Research Applied Research Award: Autistic Transgender and Gender-Diverse Adults''; Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Children's National [UL1TR001876]; National Institutes of Health Clinical and Translational Science Award [KL2TR001877] FX This work was supported by an Organization for Autism Research Applied Research Award: Autistic Transgender and Gender-Diverse Adults'' ( Multiple Principal Investigators: A.I.R.v.d.M.; J.F.S.; M.-C.L.). This research was also supported by the Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Children's National (UL1TR001876) and the National Institutes of Health Clinical and Translational Science Award (KL2TR001877, J.F.S.) 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D. Hoffman-Goetz, L. TI Cancer Information Comprehension by English-as-a-Second-Language Immigrant Women SO JOURNAL OF HEALTH COMMUNICATION LA English DT Article ID COLORECTAL-CANCER; HEALTH LITERACY; PREVENTIVE SERVICES; OLDER-ADULTS; BREAST; CARE; ACCULTURATION; PROFICIENCY; BARRIERS; BELIEFS AB Limited acculturation and socioeconomic factors have been associated with lower participation in cancer screening. Limited comprehension of cancer prevention information may contribute to this association. The authors used a stepwise linear regression to model acculturation and socioeconomic factors as predictors of comprehension (colon cancer and general health information) and screening intention in a sample of 78 Spanish-speaking immigrant women in Canada. The authors used the McNemar test to look for changes in women's screening intention. They used the Bidimensional Acculturation Scale, a language-based scale, to assess acculturation. Among English-as-a-second-language immigrant women, acculturation, television and Internet use, age, and Spanish-language education predicted comprehension of cancer prevention information, F(3, 69)=6.76, p.001, R2=.23. These variables also predicted comprehension of general health information, via the short form of the Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults, F(4, 68)=12.13, p.001, R2=.42; and the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine, F(2, 70)=7.54, p=.001, R2=.17. However, the variables did not predict screening intention. More women expressed intention to be screened after reading the cancer prevention information than expected by chance alone, p=.002. Acculturation is an important influence on the comprehension of health information by older English-as-a-second-language immigrant women. However, other culture-related factors not measured by the Bidimensional Acculturation Scale likely influence their exposure to and understanding of health and cancer prevention information. C1 [Thomson, M. D.; Hoffman-Goetz, L.] Univ Waterloo, Fac Appl Hlth Sci, Dept Hlth Studies & Gerontol, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada. C3 University of Waterloo RP Hoffman-Goetz, L (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, Fac Appl Hlth Sci, Dept Hlth Studies & Gerontol, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada. 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Health Commun. PY 2011 VL 16 IS 1 BP 17 EP 33 AR PII 930323253 DI 10.1080/10810730.2010.529496 PG 17 WC Communication; Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Communication; Information Science & Library Science GA 714PG UT WOS:000286820900003 PM 21120740 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Holguin, F Moughrabieh, MA Ojeda, V Patel, SR Peyrani, P Pinedo, M Celedon, JC Douglas, IS Upson, DJ Roman, J AF Holguin, Fernando Anas Moughrabieh, M. Ojeda, Victoria Patel, Sanjay R. Peyrani, Paula Pinedo, Miguel Celedon, Juan C. Douglas, Ivor S. Upson, Dona J. Roman, Jesse TI Respiratory Health in Migrant Populations: A Crisis Overlooked SO ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN THORACIC SOCIETY LA English DT Article DE lung; asthma; deportation; sleep; refugees ID POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; INJECTION-DRUG USERS; DEPORTATION EXPERIENCES; SLEEP DISTURBANCE; HIV-INFECTION; UNITED-STATES; RISK-FACTORS; TIJUANA; ASTHMA; ACCULTURATION AB The crisis in the Middle East has raised awareness about the challenges encountered by migrant populations, in particular, health-care access and delivery. Similar challenges are encountered by migrant populations around the world, including those entering the United States as refugees and/or survivors of torture as well as Mexicans and other Latin Americans crossing the border. During the 2016 International American Thoracic Society Meeting held in San Francisco, California, a group of researchers and health-care providers discussed these challenges at a minisymposium devoted to the respiratory health of migrants. The discussion focused on the increased incidence of airway diseases among individuals migrating to more developed countries, the problems created by sleep disorders and their implications for cardiovascular and mental health, the challenges inherent in the control of infections in refugee populations, and the problems resulting from deportation. The group also discussed the potential impact of novel strategies made available by Internet-based technologies and how these strategies could be deployed to support worldwide efforts in assisting migrants and refugees, even in countries that find themselves in the direst circumstances. These presentations are summarized in this document, which is not meant to be exhaustive, but to improve awareness about the challenges confronted by migrants and their host nations regarding respiratory health-care access and delivery, and about the need for adequate investment of resources to better define these challenges through research and for the development of efficient strategies for intervention. C1 [Holguin, Fernando] Univ Colorado, Dept Med, Pulm Sci, Denver, CO 80262 USA. [Anas Moughrabieh, M.] Wayne State Univ, Dept Med, Div Pulm & Crit Care, Detroit, MI 48202 USA. [Ojeda, Victoria] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Med, Div Global Publ Hlth, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA. [Patel, Sanjay R.] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Med, Div Pulm Allergy & Crit Care Med, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA. [Peyrani, Paula] Univ Louisville, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Med, Div Infect Dis, Louisville, KY 40292 USA. [Pinedo, Miguel] Univ Calif Berkeley, Alcohol Res Grp, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. [Celedon, Juan C.] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Pediat, Div Pulm Med Allergy & Immunol, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA. [Douglas, Ivor S.] Univ Colorado, Denver Hlth Med Ctr, Dept Med, Div Pulm & Crit Care, Boulder, CO 80309 USA. [Douglas, Ivor S.] Anschutz Med Ctr, Denver, CO USA. [Upson, Dona J.] New Mexico Vet Affairs Hlth Care Serv, Dept Med, Div Pulm & Crit Care, Albuquerque, NM USA. [Roman, Jesse] Univ Louisville, Dept Med, Div Pulm Crit Care & Sleep Disorders, Louisville, KY 40292 USA. [Roman, Jesse] Univ Louisville, Dept Pharmacol, Louisville, KY 40292 USA. [Roman, Jesse] Robley Rex Vet Affairs Med Ctr, Louisville, KY USA. C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus; University of Colorado Denver; Wayne State University; University of California System; University of California San Diego; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); University of Pittsburgh; University of Louisville; Alcohol Research Group; University of California System; University of California Berkeley; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); University of Pittsburgh; Denver Health Medical Center; University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder; University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus; University of Louisville; University of Louisville RP Roman, J (corresponding author), Univ Louisville, Dept Med, 550 S Jackson St,ACB 3rd floor,Med Suite, Louisville, KY 40202 USA. 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Am. Thoracic Society PD FEB PY 2017 VL 14 IS 2 BP 153 EP 159 DI 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201608-592PS PG 7 WC Respiratory System WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Respiratory System GA FR9ZX UT WOS:000419434800001 PM 28146384 OA Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Cong, Z Feng, D Liu, Y Esperat, MC AF Cong, Zhen Feng, Du Liu, Yin Esperat, M. Christina TI Sedentary Behaviors Among Hispanic Children: Influences of Parental Support in a School Intervention Program SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH PROMOTION LA English DT Article DE Sedentary Behaviors; Child; Hispanic; Prevention Research ID ACCULTURATION-RATING-SCALE; MEXICAN-AMERICANS-II; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; CHILDHOOD OBESITY; WEIGHT STATUS; TELEVISION; OVERWEIGHT; ADOLESCENTS; YOUTH; INACTIVITY AB Purpose. To examine the effect of parental support on sedentary behaviors among Hispanic children. Design and Setting. A longitudinal quasi-experimental design with Jive waves of data collection was used to examine the effect of parental support on children's sedentary behaviors in a school-based intervention program in. west Texas. Subjects. Hispanic low-income parents and their children of 5 to 9 years (N = 416 child-parent dyads) over a 22-month period (1217 observations). Intervention. Transformacion Para Salud was a multicomponent intervention program aimed at prevention and control of childhood overweight and obesity. It used a community-based participatory research approach, including nutrition education, physical exercise, gardening and family involvement. Measures. Sedentary behaviors were measured by parents' report of their children's daily screen time per week, including TV/DVD, computer, Internet, and video games. Parental support was measured with parents' reported support for active living. Analysis. Growth curve analysis was used to examine trajectories of sedentary behaviors of children. Results. Response rate was over 70%. Parental support reduced children's sedentary behaviors. Girls were less sedentary than boys, but girls were less affected by parental support. The intervention was effective in reducing children's sedentary behaviors over time. Conclusion. It is important for school intervention programs to mobilize parents to provide more support to reduce sedentary behaviors. (Am J Health Promot 2012;26[5]:270-280.) C1 [Cong, Zhen; Feng, Du; Liu, Yin] Texas Tech Univ, Dept Human Dev & Family Studies, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA. [Esperat, M. Christina] Texas Tech Univ, Hlth Sci Ctr, Sch Nursing, Lubbock, TX 79430 USA. C3 Texas Tech University System; Texas Tech University; Texas Tech University System; Texas Tech University Health Science Center RP Cong, Z (corresponding author), Texas Tech Univ, Dept Human Dev & Family Studies, POB 41230, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA. 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J. Health Promot. PD MAY-JUN PY 2012 VL 26 IS 5 BP 270 EP 280 DI 10.4278/ajhp.100226-QUAN-60 PG 11 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 937FI UT WOS:000303644000003 PM 22548421 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT B AU Gbadamosi, A AF Gbadamosi, Ayantunji BE Nwankwo, S Ibeh, K TI Family consumption systems in Africa A focus on children SO ROUTLEDGE COMPANION TO BUSINESS IN AFRICA SE Routledge Companions in Business Management and Accounting LA English DT Article; Book Chapter ID CHINESE CHILDREN; BEHAVIOR; VALUES; POWER AB There have been significant interests shown by marketers and researchers in family as a consumption unit in the society. The roles that children, as members of their families, play in this system have also attracted huge attention among stakeholders. Nevertheless, this phenomenon in an African context has attracted relatively little attention when compared to what has been documented in the literature about the topic in Western countries. Accordingly, this chapter pinpoints this lacuna and extends the discourse on the subject with specific reference to Africa. The overriding contention in this chapter is that, while the traditional view on African culture revolves around values such as tribal loyalty, group orientation, and obedience to elders, it will be misleading to assume that children in this cultural context are passive members in the family consumption systems. This is because globalization and socialization agents like peers, and marketing communications tools such as television and the internet, are exposing them to foreign cultural values and gradually strengthening them to be more involved in their families' marketing transactions. So, they are involved in acculturation even on their own soil. Hence, African children are becoming involved in all the stages of the family decision-making process and as initiators of ideas to buy certain offerings, influencers of purchase ideas, buyers and users of products and services bought in their families, and even deciders of which products/brands to buy and how to buy them. There are implications and opportunities from this development for various businesses, from SMEs to multinationals, that provide offerings targeted at children and their families in Africa. C1 [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Univ E London, RDBS, Res & Knowledge Exchange Comm, London E15 4LZ, England. [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Univ E London, RDBS, Mkt, London E15 4LZ, England. [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Univ E London, RDBS, Int Mkt Management, London E15 4LZ, England. [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Univ Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria. [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Univ Salford, Salford M5 4WT, Lancs, England. [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Manchester M15 6BH, Lancs, England. [Gbadamosi, Ayantunji] Liverpool Hope Univ, Liverpool, Merseyside, England. C3 University of East London; University of East London; University of East London; University of Lagos; University of Salford; Manchester Metropolitan University; Liverpool Hope University RP Gbadamosi, A (corresponding author), Univ E London, RDBS, Res & Knowledge Exchange Comm, London E15 4LZ, England. CR AfDB, 2012, BRIEF NOT AFDBS LONG, P1 [Anonymous], 1994, BRIT FOOD J, DOI DOI 10.1108/00070709410074623 [Anonymous], 1995, INT MARKET REV [Anonymous], EMERGING PERSPECTIVE, DOI DOI 10.1177/009207038501300332 [Anonymous], 1993, SNACKS MAGAZINE JUN, P35 BAGOZZI RP, 1975, J MARKETING, V39, P32, DOI 10.2307/1250593 BEARDEN WO, 1979, J CONSUM RES, V6, P308, DOI 10.1086/208772 Beck T, 2007, J ECON GROWTH, V12, P27, DOI 10.1007/s10887-007-9010-6 BODDEWYN JJ, 1992, GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES Cassandro M. 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A theoretical model, which was developed based on transitions theory and the midlife women's attitudes toward physical activity theory, consists of 4 major variables, including length of stay in the United States, country of birth, level of acculturation, and midlife women's physical activity. To test the theoretical model, a secondary analysis with data from 127 Hispanic women and 123 non-Hispanic (NH) Asian women in a national Internet study was used. Among the major variables of the model, length of stay in the United States was negatively associated with physical activity in Hispanic women. Level of acculturation in NH Asian women was positively correlated with women's physical activity. Country of birth and level of acculturation were significant factors that influenced physical activity in both Hispanic and NH Asian women. The findings support the theoretical model that was developed to examine relationships between immigration transition and physical activity; it shows that immigration transition can play an essential role in influencing health behaviors of immigrant populations in the United States. The NH theoretical model can be widely used in nursing practice and research that focus on immigrant women and their health behaviors. Health care providers need to consider the influences of immigration transition to promote immigrant women's physical activity. C1 [Chang, Sun Ju] Chungbuk Natl Univ, Dept Nursing Sci, 52 Naesudong Ro, Chungju Si 361763, Chungbuk, South Korea. [Im, Eun-Ok] Univ Penn, Sch Nursing, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. C3 Chungbuk National University; University of Pennsylvania RP Chang, SJ (corresponding author), Chungbuk Natl Univ, Dept Nursing Sci, 52 Naesudong Ro, Chungju Si 361763, Chungbuk, South Korea. EM sjchang@chungbuk.ac.kr OI Chang, Sun Ju/0000-0001-6967-1564 FU National Institutes of Health (NIH/NINR/NHLBI) [R01NR010568] FX The original study of this secondary analysis was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH/NINR/NHLBI; R01NR010568). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH. CR Abraido-Lanza AF, 2006, AM J PUBLIC HEALTH, V96, P1342, DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2005.064980 Ainsworth BE, 2000, MED SCI SPORT EXER, V32, P1327, DOI 10.1097/00005768-200007000-00022 [Anonymous], CULTURE HLTH ASIAN C [Anonymous], ACCULTURATION ADV TH, DOI DOI 10.1037/10472-010 Berrigan D, 2006, RES Q EXERCISE SPORT, V77, P147 Choi JW, 2008, WESTERN J NURS RES, V30, P620, DOI 10.1177/0193945907310645 Dergance JM, 2005, J AM GERIATR SOC, V53, P1240, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2005.53363.x Im EO, 2005, ADV NURS SCI, V28, P137, DOI 10.1097/00012272-200504000-00006 Im Eun-Ok, 2006, Health Care Women Int, V27, P666, DOI 10.1080/07399330600817535 Im EO, 2012, NURS RES, V61, P342, DOI 10.1097/NNR.0b013e31825da85a Im EO, 2011, NURS OUTLOOK, V59, P278, DOI 10.1016/j.outlook.2011.03.008 Im EO, 2010, WOMEN HEALTH, V50, P563, DOI 10.1080/03630242.2010.510387 Im EO, 2010, NURS OUTLOOK, V58, P52, DOI 10.1016/j.outlook.2009.07.001 Kandula NR, 2005, ANN EPIDEMIOL, V15, P257, DOI 10.1016/j.annepidem.2004.06.006 Lee SK, 2000, SOC SCI MED, V51, P159, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00446-3 Marquez DX, 2006, ANN BEHAV MED, V31, P138, DOI 10.1207/s15324796abm3102_5 Marshall Khiya J, 2005, Health Care Women Int, V26, P916, DOI 10.1080/07399330500301846 Meleis A. I., 2010, TRANSITIONS THEORY M Meleis AI, 2000, ADV NURS SCI, V23, P12, DOI 10.1097/00012272-200009000-00006 Schmidt MD, 2006, MED SCI SPORT EXER, V38, P42, DOI 10.1249/01.mss.0000181301.07516.d6 Sin Mo-Kyung, 2011, Issues Ment Health Nurs, V32, P177, DOI 10.3109/01612840.2010.536611 SUINN RM, 1992, EDUC PSYCHOL MEAS, V52, P1041, DOI 10.1177/0013164492052004028 Unger JB, 2004, J COMMUN HEALTH, V29, P467, DOI 10.1007/s10900-004-3395-3 United States Census Bureau, 2011, 2008 2010 AM COMM SU Walter N. P., 2011, NEWLY ARRIVED FOREIG Wolin KY, 2006, PREV MED, V42, P266, DOI 10.1016/j.ypmed.2006.01.005 NR 26 TC 5 Z9 5 U1 0 U2 6 PU SPRINGER PUBLISHING CO PI NEW YORK PA 11 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10036 USA SN 1541-6577 EI 1945-7286 J9 RES THEOR NURS PRACT JI Res. Theory Nurs. Pract. PY 2015 VL 29 IS 3 BP 177 EP 188 DI 10.1891/1541-6577.29.3.177 PG 12 WC Nursing WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Nursing GA DC3PG UT WOS:000369130600002 PM 26502554 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Im, EO Choi, MY Kim, G Jin, RQ Chee, W AF Im, Eun-Ok Choi, Mi-Young Kim, Gayeong Jin, Ruiqi Chee, Wonshik TI Immigration transition and gastrointestinal symptoms during menopausal transition: midlife women in the US SO MENOPAUSE-THE JOURNAL OF THE NORTH AMERICAN MENOPAUSE SOCIETY LA English DT Article DE Acculturation; Ethnicity; Gastrointestinal symptoms; Immigration; Menopausal transition; Midlife women; Race ID ETHNIC-DIFFERENCES; ASIAN-AMERICAN; ACCULTURATION; DEPRESSION; EXPERIENCE; DISORDERS; ATTITUDES; HEALTH; RISK AB Objectives This study aimed to explore the associations of immigration transition to gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms experienced during the menopausal transition among 974 midlife women in the US. Methods The data from 974 midlife women from 2 national Internet survey studies were used for this secondary analysis. Only the data related to background characteristics and, health/menopausal status, immigration transition, and the Gastrointestinal Symptom Index for Midlife Women were included. The data were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics including analyses of covariance, logistic regression analyses, and hierarchical multiple regression analyses. Results There were statistical differences in total numbers and total severity scores of total GI symptoms between immigrants and nonimmigrants (F = 7.08 and 6.20, respectively; both P < 0.05); Immigrants had fewer total numbers and lower total severity scores of GI symptoms than nonimmigrants. All immigration transition variables including immigration status, the length of stay in the US, and the acculturation level accounted for 11.8% of the total numbers (F = 32.79, P < 0.001) and 12.5% of the total severity scores of GI symptoms (F = 35.10, P < 0.001). However, only immigration status (being nonimmigrant) was a significant factor that was associated with greater total numbers and higher total severity scores of GI symptoms (beta = 0.62, P < 0.001 and beta = 0.65, P < 0.001, respectively). Conclusions This study supports that immigration status is a significant factor that influences GI symptoms during the menopausal transition. C1 [Im, Eun-Ok; Choi, Mi-Young; Kim, Gayeong; Jin, Ruiqi; Chee, Wonshik] Emory Univ, Sch Nursing, Atlanta, GA USA. [Choi, Mi-Young] Chungbuk Natl Univ, Dept Nursing Sci, Chungcheongbuk Do, South Korea. C3 Emory University; Chungbuk National University RP Im, EO (corresponding author), Emory Univ, Nell HodgsonWoodruff Sch Nursing, 1520 Clifton Rd, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. EM eun.ok.im@emory.edu RI Choi, Mi Young/AFJ-8732-2022 OI JIN, RUIQI/0000-0003-0950-5761 FU National Institute of Health [1R01NR008926, R01NR010568] FX This is a secondary analysis of the quantitative data from two larger studies that were funded by the National Institute of Health (NIH/NINR/NIA, 1R01NR008926 and NIH/NINR/NHLBI, R01NR010568). CR [Anonymous], 2003, ACCULTURATION ADV TH [Anonymous], ACCULTURATION ADV TH, DOI DOI 10.1037/10472-010 Avis NE, 2001, SOC SCI MED, V52, P345, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(00)00147-7 Barnes EL, 2022, INFLAMM BOWEL DIS, V28, P983, DOI 10.1093/ibd/izab219 Bernstein MT, 2014, BMC WOMENS HEALTH, V14, DOI 10.1186/1472-6874-14-14 BERRY JW, 1989, APPL PSYCHOL-INT REV, V38, P185, DOI 10.1111/j.1464-0597.1989.tb01208.x Callan Nini G L, 2019, Womens Midlife Health, V5, P2, DOI 10.1186/s40695-019-0046-5 Choi H, 2001, Issues Compr Pediatr Nurs, V24, P193 Chuah KH, 2018, J NEUROGASTROENTEROL, V24, P536, DOI 10.5056/jnm18064 Frisbie WP, 2001, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V153, P372, DOI 10.1093/aje/153.4.372 Han CJ, 2018, GASTROENTEROL NURS, V41, P223, DOI 10.1097/SGA.0000000000000330 Harlow Sioban D, 2017, Womens Midlife Health, V3, DOI 10.1186/s40695-017-0021-y Heitkemper Margaret M, 2009, Gend Med, V6 Suppl 2, P152, DOI 10.1016/j.genm.2009.03.004 Huerta-Franco MR, 2018, CLIN EXP GASTROENTER, V11, P39, DOI 10.2147/CEG.S144967 Im Eun-Ok, 2006, Health Care Women Int, V27, P666, DOI 10.1080/07399330600817535 Im Eun-Ok, 2006, Health Care Women Int, V27, P268, DOI 10.1080/07399330500506600 Im EO, 2007, NURS RES, V56, P296, DOI 10.1097/01.NNR.0000289502.45284.b5 Im EO, 2012, NURS RES, V61, P342, DOI 10.1097/NNR.0b013e31825da85a Im EO, 2010, WESTERN J NURS RES, V32, P540, DOI 10.1177/0193945909354343 Im EO, 2010, J TRANSCULT NURS, V21, P123, DOI 10.1177/1043659609357639 Im EO, 2009, HEALTH CARE WOMEN IN, V30, P339, DOI 10.1080/07399330802695002 Jang SH, 2018, WOMEN HEALTH, V58, P112, DOI 10.1080/03630242.2017.1282394 Jimenez DE, 2010, J AM GERIATR SOC, V58, P256, DOI 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2009.02685.x Judd FK, 2012, J AFFECT DISORDERS, V136, P199, DOI 10.1016/j.jad.2010.12.010 Keefe S. E., 1987, CHICANO ETHNICITY Koloski NA, 2003, AM J GASTROENTEROL, V98, P789, DOI 10.1016/S0002-9270(03)00052-2 Lagomasino IT, 2005, PSYCHIAT SERV, V56, P1517, DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.56.12.1517 Li C, 2005, MATURITAS, V52, P306, DOI 10.1016/j.maturitas.2005.05.005 MARMOT MG, 1976, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V104, P225, DOI 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a112296 Miller AM, 2002, NURS RES, V51, P26, DOI 10.1097/00006199-200201000-00005 Oh YJ, 2002, J SOC PSYCHOL, V142, P511, DOI 10.1080/00224540209603915 Ortega AN, 2000, J NERV MENT DIS, V188, P728, DOI 10.1097/00005053-200011000-00002 Purnell L. D., 2020, TXB TRANSCULTURAL HL Sin Mo-Kyung, 2011, Issues Ment Health Nurs, V32, P177, DOI 10.3109/01612840.2010.536611 SUINN RM, 1992, EDUC PSYCHOL MEAS, V52, P1041, DOI 10.1177/0013164492052004028 Woods NF, 2009, MENOPAUSE, V16, P708, DOI 10.1097/gme.0b013e318198d6b2 NR 36 TC 0 Z9 0 U1 0 U2 2 PU LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS PI PHILADELPHIA PA TWO COMMERCE SQ, 2001 MARKET ST, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19103 USA SN 1072-3714 EI 1530-0374 J9 MENOPAUSE JI Menopause-J. N. Am. Menopause Soc. PD JUL PY 2022 VL 29 IS 7 BP 840 EP 849 DI 10.1097/GME.0000000000001989 PG 10 WC Obstetrics & Gynecology WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED) SC Obstetrics & Gynecology GA 2R6AI UT WOS:000821192400010 PM 35796555 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lee, JJ Rao, DW Robles, G Kerani, RP Naismith, K Rodriguez-Diaz, CE Rendina, HJ Katz, DA AF Lee, Jane J. Rao, Darcy White Robles, Gabriel Kerani, Roxanne P. Naismith, Kelly Rodriguez-Diaz, Carlos E. Rendina, H. Jonathon Katz, David A. TI Differences in HIV Risk and Prevention Among Cisgender Latino Sexual Minority Men by Language of Online Survey Completion: Analysis of National and Washington State Data SO AIDS AND BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE Latino; Sexual minority men; Language; Online surveys; HIV prevention ID HEALTH-CARE; ACCESS; ACCULTURATION; BEHAVIORS; BARRIERS; IMPACT AB Internet-based surveys can be programmed and advertised in multiple languages to reach non-English-speaking individuals, but it is unclear the extent to which this enhances the diversity of participants and supports inclusion of individuals at higher risk for HIV. We sought to examine how language of survey completion (English or Spanish) was associated with sociodemographic characteristics and indicators of HIV risk and prevention among cisgender Latino sexual minority men (SMM). We analyzed national and Washington State data using the Understanding New Infections through Targeted Epidemiology (UNITE) Cohort Study (2017 and 2018) and the Washington HIV/STI Prevention Project (WHSPP) survey (2017 and 2018/2019), respectively. Latino SMM who completed online surveys in Spanish differed from those who completed surveys in English across several sociodemographic characteristics including age, education, and income. After adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics and HIV-related risk factors, Spanish language respondents in UNITE were less likely to have tested for HIV in the past year, and those in WHSPP were more likely to report a recent STI diagnosis. Findings suggest that Latino SMM who complete surveys in Spanish comprise a unique subgroup that may have a specific HIV health and risk behavior profile. Our results suggest a need for increased and tailored efforts to recruit and include Spanish-speaking Latino SMM for local and national research and public health programming. C1 [Lee, Jane J.] Univ Washington, Sch Social Work, 4101 15th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105 USA. [Rao, Darcy White] Univ Washington, Dept Epidemiol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. [Robles, Gabriel] Rutgers State Univ, Sch Social Work, New Brunswick, NJ USA. [Kerani, Roxanne P.] Univ Washington, Dept Med, Seattle, WA USA. [Naismith, Kelly] Washington State Dept Hlth, Tumwater, WA USA. [Rodriguez-Diaz, Carlos E.; Rendina, H. Jonathon] George Washington Univ, Milken Inst, Sch Publ Hlth, Washington, DC USA. [Katz, David A.] Univ Washington, Dept Global Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; Rutgers State University New Brunswick; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; George Washington University; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle RP Lee, JJ (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Sch Social Work, 4101 15th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105 USA. EM janejlee@uw.edu RI Lee, Jane/AAC-9133-2022; Kerani, Roxanne/AAG-3452-2020 OI Kerani, Roxanne/0000-0002-4416-4280; Lee, Jane/0000-0002-7047-9315; Rao, Darcy/0000-0003-0058-8513 FU University of Washington STD/AIDS Research Training Program [NIH T32 AI07140]; Washington State Department of Health; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID); National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH); Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) [UG3/UH3-AI133674]; National Center For Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [KL2TR002317]; NIAID [R01 AI127232]; [UH3AI133674-04S1] FX The WHSSP was funded by the University of Washington STD/AIDS Research Training Program (NIH T32 AI07140) and the Washington State Department of Health. The UNITE study was supported by a grant jointly awarded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), and Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) (UG3/UH3-AI133674, PI: Rendina). Jane J. Lee and Darcy W. Rao were supported by the National Center For Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number KL2TR002317. Roxanne P. Kerani was supported by NIAID R01 AI127232. Gabriel Robles was supported by an early career faculty diversity supplement (UH3AI133674-04S1). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. CR [Anonymous], 2017, USE SPANISH DECLINES [Anonymous], HIV GAY BIS MEN Avoundjian T, SOC EP RES ANN M Castillo-Mancilla JR, 2014, HIV CLIN TRIALS, V15, P14, DOI 10.1310/hct1501-14 Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 1 YEAR GEOGR FOC END Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, HIV HISPANICSLATINOS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2020, DIAGN HIV INF US DEP Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 2019, PRE EXP PROPHYL Crowley JS., 2019, BOLSTERING LATINX GA Du HF, 2015, HEALTH PSYCHOL REV, V9, P103, DOI 10.1080/17437199.2013.840952 HANRAHAN D, 2015, PLOS ONE, V10 IBM Corp, 2015, IBM SPSS STAT WINDOW Jaksic I., 2015, DEBATING RACE ETHNIC Kanny D, 2019, MMWR-MORBID MORTAL W, V68, P801, DOI 10.15585/mmwr.mm6837a2 Kinsler JJ, 2009, J HEALTH CARE POOR U, V20, P996, DOI 10.1353/hpu.0.0204 Mogobe KD, 2016, AIDS RES TREAT, V2016, DOI 10.1155/2016/5015707 Murray Susan, 2007, J Health Serv Res Policy, V12, P205, DOI 10.1258/135581907782101642 Noe-Bustamante L., 2019, KEY FACTS US HISP TH Patten Eileen, 2016, NATIONS LATINO POPUL Paz-Bailey G, 2017, JAIDS-J ACQ IMM DEF, V75, pS288, DOI 10.1097/qai.0000000000001404 R Core Team, 2022, R LANG ENV STAT COMP RAJ A, 2001, HDB CULTURAL HLTH PS, P195, DOI DOI 10.1016/B978-012402771-8/50010-6 Rao DW, 2019, SEX TRANSM DIS, V46, P221, DOI 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000000965 Rao DW, 2017, WASHINGTON HIV PREVE Rendina HJ, 2021, AM J EPIDEMIOL, V190, P681, DOI 10.1093/aje/kwaa226 Rios-Ellis B, 2008, J IMMIGR MINOR HEALT, V10, P445, DOI 10.1007/s10903-007-9105-3 Sanchez Travis, 2012, Open AIDS J, V6, P83, DOI 10.2174/1874613601206010083 Sanchez TH, 2018, AIDS BEHAV, V22, P2413, DOI 10.1007/s10461-018-2168-4 Schwei RJ, 2016, INT J NURS STUD, V54, P36, DOI 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2015.03.001 Spadafino JT, 2016, AIDS CARE, V28, P695, DOI 10.1080/09540121.2016.1147017 StataCorp, 2013, STATA STAT SOFTW REL Sun Christina J, 2018, J AIDS Clin Res, V9, DOI 10.4172/2155-6113.1000757 Tanner AE, 2014, J HEALTH CARE POOR U, V25, P1679, DOI 10.1353/hpu.2014.0156 Timmins CL, 2002, J MIDWIFERY WOM HEAL, V47, P80, DOI 10.1016/S1526-9523(02)00218-0 Washington State Department of Health, 2020, STD FAST FACTS WASH Washington State Department of Health, 2016, END AIDS WASH 2020 Wittenauer R, 2019, WASHINGTON HIV PREVE NR 37 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 0 U2 0 PU SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS PI NEW YORK PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA SN 1090-7165 EI 1573-3254 J9 AIDS BEHAV JI AIDS Behav. PD MAR PY 2022 VL 26 IS 3 BP 662 EP 673 DI 10.1007/s10461-021-03426-2 EA AUG 2021 PG 12 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Social Sciences, Biomedical WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Biomedical Social Sciences GA YX8TX UT WOS:000685600800002 PM 34405303 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Maneze, D Everett, B DiGiacomo, M Davidson, PM Salamonson, Y AF Maneze, Della Everett, Bronwyn DiGiacomo, Michelle Davidson, Patricia M. Salamonson, Yenna TI An examination of responses to surveys among Filipino-Australian migrants SO NURSE RESEARCHER LA English DT Article DE acculturation; culturally and linguistically diverse; English language; hard copy; migrants; online; open-ended questions; paper-based; surveys; web-based ID OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONS; INTERNET AB Background Surveys are frequently used to collect data. Although paper surveys are commonly used, online surveys are gaining in popularity, with the inclusion of open-ended questions (OEQs) allowing respondents to freely express their views. Little is known about how Filipino-Australian migrants respond to surveys. There is some concern about the usefulness of OEQs administered to culturally and linguistically diverse migrants, who may have limited capacity to articulate their thoughts in writing. Aim To examine the responses of Filipino-Australian migrants to a survey. Discussion A total of 552 respondents were recruited, of whom 428 (78%) completed the questionnaire online. The overall response rate to the OEQs was 69%, with higher completion rates among those given a paper-based questionnaire and those with university educations. Conclusion Filipino migrants with functional English language skills responded well to the online survey. Paper-based administration elicited more OEQ responses, which is attributed to greater interaction between participants and researchers. Those with university educations may have more capacity to express themselves in English and were therefore more likely to complete the OEQs. Implications for practice The high response rate obtained in this study suggests that among Filipino-Australian migrants who rated their English language skills and educational level highly, the translation of OEQs may not be necessary. This has important implications for resources in research. Face-to-face interaction between participants and researchers is an important strategy for increasing the rates of response to OEQs. C1 [Maneze, Della] South Western Sydney Local Hlth Dist, Ingleburn, NSW, Australia. [Maneze, Della] Univ Western Sydney, Penrith, NSW, Australia. [Maneze, Della; Everett, Bronwyn; Salamonson, Yenna] CANR, Liverpool, NSW, Australia. [Maneze, Della; Everett, Bronwyn; Salamonson, Yenna] Ingham Inst Appl Med Res, Liverpool, NSW, Australia. [Everett, Bronwyn; Salamonson, Yenna] Western Sydney Univ, Sch Nursing & Midwifery, Penrith, NSW, Australia. [DiGiacomo, Michelle; Davidson, Patricia M.] Univ Technol Sydney, Ctr Cardiovasc & Chron Care, Fac Hlth, Sydney, NSW, Australia. [Davidson, Patricia M.] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Nursing, Baltimore, MD USA. C3 Western Sydney University; Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research; Western Sydney University; University of Technology Sydney; Johns Hopkins University RP Maneze, D (corresponding author), South Western Sydney Local Hlth Dist, Ingleburn, NSW, Australia. EM della.maneze@sswahs.nsw.gov.au RI Maneze, Della/HDM-4201-2022; Salamonson, Yenna/AAX-4499-2020; Everett, Bronwyn Lee/AAT-1308-2021; Maneze, Della/K-8308-2016 OI Maneze, Della/0000-0001-6475-8804; Davidson, Patricia M./0000-0003-2050-1534; DiGiacomo, Michelle/0000-0001-5484-8224; Everett, Bronwyn/0000-0003-1733-7462 CR Aday L.A., 2006, DESIGNING CONDUCTING, V3rd Department of Immigration and Border Protection, 2014, PEOPL AUSTR STAT 201 Garrett Pamela W, 2010, Aust New Zealand Health Policy, V7, P1, DOI 10.1186/1743-8462-7-1 GEER JG, 1988, PUBLIC OPIN QUART, V52, P365, DOI 10.1086/269113 Hargittai E, 2010, SOCIOL INQ, V80, P92, DOI 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2009.00317.x Hiller HH, 2004, NEW MEDIA SOC, V6, P731, DOI 10.1177/146144804044327 Komaric N, 2012, BMC HEALTH SERV RES, V12, DOI 10.1186/1472-6963-12-322 Lee SK, 2013, HEALTH PROMOT J AUST, V24, P98, DOI 10.1071/HE12919 Lissitsa S, 2015, POETICS, V52, P44, DOI 10.1016/j.poetic.2015.06.002 Maneze D., 2014, INT J CULTURE MENTAL, V7, P357, DOI DOI 10.1080/17542863.2013.812131 Maneze D, 2015, FACILITATORS BARRIER Maneze D, 2016, J IMMIGR MINOR HEALT, V18, P779, DOI 10.1007/s10903-015-0233-x Niedomysl T, 2009, POPUL SPACE PLACE, V15, P79, DOI 10.1002/psp.493 Nulty DD, 2008, ASSESS EVAL HIGH EDU, V33, P301, DOI 10.1080/02602930701293231 Scholz E, 2012, SOC SCI RES, V41, P1415, DOI 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.07.006 Smith J, 2015, INFORM COMMUN SOC, V18, P1022, DOI 10.1080/1369118X.2015.1007074 Stoneman P, 2013, PUBLIC UNDERST SCI, V22, P850, DOI 10.1177/0963662512441569 Thomson MD, 2009, SOC SCI MED, V69, P983, DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.05.011 NR 18 TC 1 Z9 1 U1 0 U2 7 PU RCNI PI MIDDX PA HEIGHTS, 59-65 LOWLANDS RD, HARROW, MIDDX, HA1 3AW, ENGLAND SN 1351-5578 EI 2047-8992 J9 NURSE RES JI Nurse Res. PD NOV 18 PY 2016 VL 24 IS 2 BP 30 EP 33 DI 10.7748/nr.2016.e1435 PG 4 WC Nursing WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Nursing GA EG7BQ UT WOS:000391200600010 PM 27855577 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Thapa-Bajgain, K Bajgain, BB Dahal, R Adhikari, K Chowdhury, N Chowdhury, MZI Turin, TC AF Thapa-Bajgain, Kalpana Bajgain, Bishnu Bahadur Dahal, Rudra Adhikari, Kamala Chowdhury, Nashit Chowdhury, Mohammad Z., I Turin, Tanvir C. TI Health literacy among members of the Nepalese immigrant population in Canada SO HEALTH EDUCATION JOURNAL LA English DT Article DE Canada; community engagement; health literacy; immigrants; Nepal ID GENDER-DIFFERENCES; INFORMATION; ACCULTURATION; INTERNET; IMPACT; WOMEN AB Background: Health literacy is an important public health concern and can be defined as 'the degree or extent to which the individuals have the capacity to obtain, process and understand basic health information and services to make appropriate health decisions'. Research on health literacy among recent immigrants to Canada is not that extensive. Objective: The purpose of this paper was to describe health literacy status among Nepalese immigrants residing in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Methods: In 2019, a cross-sectional study, using a self-administered questionnaire, was conducted among Nepalese immigrants in Calgary. The questionnaire comprised 38 questions including sociodemographic information, self-rated health status, having a chronic disease or not, health literacy, sources of health information and preference to gain health information. Results: We received 401 responses: 49.63% were from women, 51.37% were aged 36-55 years, 37.00% had graduate-level education, 44.96% had immigrated to Canada less than 5 years ago and 81.05% were employed full-time/part-time or self-employed. Findings revealed that 17.21% of survey participants had limited health literacy, followed by 40.15% who had marginal health literacy. The majority of the survey participants (71.82%) either always or often got health information from healthcare professionals, followed by online resources (56.61%). Conclusion: Noteworthy levels of limited health literacy and marginal health literacy were observed among the Nepalese immigrant population. Multidirectional, culturally tailored, community-led, collaborative initiatives are needed to improve health literacy among the immigrant population, to lessen health disparities and to promote better health outcomes. C1 [Thapa-Bajgain, Kalpana; Bajgain, Bishnu Bahadur; Dahal, Rudra; Adhikari, Kamala] Nepalese Canadian Community, Calgary, AB, Canada. [Thapa-Bajgain, Kalpana; Bajgain, Bishnu Bahadur; Chowdhury, Nashit; Chowdhury, Mohammad Z., I; Turin, Tanvir C.] Univ Calgary, Cumming Sch Med, Dept Community Hlth Sci, Calgary, AB, Canada. [Dahal, Rudra] Univ Lethbridge, Fac Hlth Sci, Lethbridge, AB, Canada. [Adhikari, Kamala] Alberta Hlth Serv, Dept Populat & Publ Hlth, Calgary, AB, Canada. [Chowdhury, Nashit; Chowdhury, Mohammad Z., I; Turin, Tanvir C.] Univ Calgary, Dept Family Med, Calgary, AB, Canada. [Turin, Tanvir C.] Univ Calgary, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Family Med, Room G012F,3330 Hosp Dr Northwest, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada. C3 University of Calgary; University of Lethbridge; Alberta Health Services (AHS); University of Calgary; University of Calgary; University of Calgary RP Turin, TC (corresponding author), Univ Calgary, Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Family Med, Room G012F,3330 Hosp Dr Northwest, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada. EM turin.chowdhury@ucalgary.ca RI Turin, Tanvir C/L-7617-2016 OI Turin, Tanvir C/0000-0002-7499-5050 CR [Anonymous], 2004, HLTH LITERACY PRESCR [Anonymous], 2009, FED PRACT [Anonymous], 2008, HLTH LITERACY CANADA [Anonymous], 2017, IMMIGRATION DIVERSIT Askola K, 2010, INFORM RES, V15 Bajgain BB, 2020, INT J ENV RES PUB HE, V17, DOI 10.3390/ijerph17238724 Becerra BJ, 2017, J RACIAL ETHN HEALTH, V4, P480, DOI 10.1007/s40615-016-0249-5 Benjamin-Garner Ruby, 2002, Ethnicity and Disease, V12, P124 Berkman Nancy D, 2011, Evid Rep Technol Assess (Full Rep), P1 Chew LD, 2004, FAM MED, V36, P588 Chiarelli L., 2006, IMPACT LOW HLTH LITE Gutierrez N, 2014, J COMMUN HEALTH, V39, P83, DOI 10.1007/s10900-013-9742-5 Hersh L, 2015, AM FAM PHYSICIAN, V92, P118 Hesse BW, 2005, ARCH INTERN MED, V165, P2618, DOI 10.1001/archinte.165.22.2618 Islam T., 2014, CANADIAN J TROPICAL, V1, P13 Jang Y, 2018, J HEALTH COMMUN, V23, P652, DOI 10.1080/10810730.2018.1500660 Kakai H, 2003, SOC SCI MED, V56, P851, DOI 10.1016/S0277-9536(02)00086-2 Khalid A, 2022, J MIGRATION HEALTH, V6, DOI 10.1016/j.jmh.2022.100131 Khalid A, 2022, J PRIM CARE COMMUNIT, V13, DOI 10.1177/21501319211063051 Kickbusch I., 2013, HLTH LIT SOL FACTS Lai DJ, 2017, J COMMUN HEALTH, V42, P400, DOI 10.1007/s10900-016-0269-4 Lee HY, 2015, AM J MENS HEALTH, V9, P370, DOI 10.1177/1557988314545485 Mason A, 2021, J PEDIATR NURS, V58, DOI 10.1016/j.pedn.2020.11.009 Morawa E, 2014, INT J ENV RES PUB HE, V11, P9503, DOI 10.3390/ijerph110909503 Muller MJ, 2017, J IMMIGR MINOR HEALT, V19, P623, DOI 10.1007/s10903-016-0408-0 Ng E, 2014, HEALTH EDUC J, V73, P668, DOI 10.1177/0017896913511809 Paasche-Orlow MK, 2007, AM J HEALTH BEHAV, V31, pS19 Park S., 2018, EUR J PUBLIC HEALTH, V28 Ross S., 2021, ENCY RES METHODS CRI, P769 Santana S, 2021, J PUBLIC HEALTH MAN, V27, pS258, DOI 10.1097/PHH.0000000000001324 Sheridan SL, 2011, J HEALTH COMMUN, V16, P30, DOI 10.1080/10810730.2011.604391 Smikowski J, 2009, ETHICS BEHAV, V19, P461, DOI 10.1080/10508420903274971 Statistics Canada, 2017, CENS PRF 2016 CENS Svendsen MT, 2020, BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, V20, DOI 10.1186/s12889-020-08498-8 Svensson P, 2017, CULT HEALTH SEX, V19, P752, DOI 10.1080/13691058.2016.1259503 Todd L, 2011, J CANCER EDUC, V26, P326, DOI 10.1007/s13187-010-0162-2 Tsai TI, 2018, J HEALTH COMMUN, V23, P340, DOI 10.1080/10810730.2018.1445798 Turin TC, 2020, FAM MED COMMUNITY HE, V8, DOI 10.1136/fmch-2020-000453 Turin TC, 2020, J PRIM CARE COMMUNIT, V11, DOI 10.1177/2150132720952618 Turin TC, 2022, BMJ GLOB HEALTH, V7, DOI 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-008201 Turin TC, 2021, BMJ GLOB HEALTH, V6, DOI 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-007602 Turin TC, 2021, BMJ GLOB HEALTH, V6, DOI 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-006370 Turin TC., 2022, REINVENT REFORMULATE Yu RY., 2020, U W ONTARIO MEDICAL, V88, P43 NR 44 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 0 U2 0 PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD PI LONDON PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND SN 0017-8969 EI 1748-8176 J9 HEALTH EDUC J JI Health Educ. J. PD APR PY 2023 VL 82 IS 3 BP 274 EP 285 DI 10.1177/00178969231151631 EA JAN 2023 PG 12 WC Education & Educational Research; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA C9CY2 UT WOS:000919963800001 OA hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Lebron, CN Agosto, Y Guzman, T Sutton, D Stoutenberg, M Messiah, SE St George, SM AF Lebron, Cynthia N. Agosto, Yaray Guzman, Tamisha Sutton, Danielle Stoutenberg, Mark Messiah, Sarah E. St George, Sara M. TI A qualitative study of cognitive, behavioral, and environmental influences on Hispanic mothers' early childhood feeding practices SO APPETITE LA English DT Article DE Hispanic; Obesity; Prevention; Feeding; Family health; SCT ID PRESCHOOL-CHILDREN; HEALTH-CARE; LOW-INCOME; RACIAL/ETHNIC DISPARITIES; CULTURAL INFLUENCES; PREVENTING OBESITY; REPEATED EXPOSURE; PARENTING STYLE; ACCULTURATION; ACCEPTANCE AB Young children's lifestyle behaviors are largely shaped by their parents. There are socioeconomic risk factors particular to Hispanic populations that influence the way parents feed their children. As obesity continues to be a public health issue with substantial inequities across race and ethnicity, it is critical to understand Hispanic parents' food choices and feeding practices. The objective of this qualitative study is to identify the behavioral, environmental, and cognitive factors that influence the parental food choices and feeding behaviors of Hispanic mothers of children ages 0-5 years. Snowball sampling was used to recruit participants from the community (n = 30) who were 1) female; 2) Hispanic; 3) over the age of 18; and 4) a mother to child(ren) between the ages zero and five. Each interview consisted of a brief demographic survey and a set of open-ended questions based on Social Cognitive Theory constructs. A thematic analysis using a combined deductive and inductive approach was used to analyze transcriptions. Results indicated that mothers' attitudes around breastfeeding were connected with their challenges, while their attitudes around solid foods were expressed in their feeding strategies. Mothers used strategies of modeling, repeated exposure, and practices of "sneaking" in healthy foods and bribing to promote healthy eating. Mothers were most likely to seek out information from (1) pediatricians, (2) female family members, and (3) the internet. Hispanic mothers actively seek out information from many different sources that impact how they feed their young children. Understanding their trusted sources and how it influences the SCT constructs is an important step in preventing early childhood obesity. C1 [Lebron, Cynthia N.] Univ Miami, Sch Nursing & Hlth Studies, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA. [Agosto, Yaray; Guzman, Tamisha] Florida Int Univ, Robert Stempel Coll Publ Hlth & Social Work, Miami, FL 33199 USA. [Sutton, Danielle; St George, Sara M.] Univ Miami, Miller Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth Sci, Miami, FL 33136 USA. [Stoutenberg, Mark] Temple Univ, Coll Publ Hlth, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA. [Messiah, Sarah E.] Univ Texas Dallas, Hlth Sci Ctr, Sch Publ Hlth, Dallas Campus, Dallas, TX USA. [Messiah, Sarah E.] Childrens Hlth Syst Texas, Ctr Pediat Populat Hlth, Dallas, TX USA. [Messiah, Sarah E.] UTHlth Sch Publ Hlth, Dallas, TX USA. C3 University of Miami; State University System of Florida; Florida International University; University of Miami; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); Temple University; University of Texas System; University of Texas Dallas RP Lebron, CN (corresponding author), Univ Miami, Sch Nursing & Hlth Studies, Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA. EM clebron@miami.edu OI Guzman, Tamisha/0000-0003-4758-1191; Stoutenberg, Mark/0000-0001-5206-7627 FU National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [F31DK116533] FX This work was supported by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (F31DK116533) . 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EA APR 2021 PG 8 WC Behavioral Sciences; Nutrition & Dietetics WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Behavioral Sciences; Nutrition & Dietetics GA XL1WC UT WOS:000727940600004 PM 33864860 OA Bronze, Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Mcdonald, SA Adl, R AF Mcdonald, Shirley Ann Adl, Ramine TI Stopping plagiarism through enculturation: A practice-based approach SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION LA English DT Article DE Inadvertent plagiarism; academic integrity; academic literacy; enculturation; best practices; acculturation; patchwriting; referencing sources; active learning; student-centered learning ID PERCEPTIONS; INTEGRITY; GRAMMAR AB For the past decade or more, instructors in all disciplines and at all levels of education have worried about increased student misconduct and plagiarism. The rise in plagiarism is due, partly, to an evolving ethos among communities of users and providers who share open source media and, partly, to misleading models, such as Internet sources that offer information without crediting authors ((Buchanan & McKay, 2018). There has also been a rise in inadvertent plagiarism as international students arrive at Western universities and face the challenges of developing skills in a new language and of learning how to reference source materials (Howard, 2005; Lei & Hu, 2015; Li & Casanave, 2012; Pecorari, 2003). This paper explores the efficacy of the Academic Literacies Training in English (ALTE) method which the authors designed to help students develop skills in quoting and citing sources while fostering enculturation, an anthropological term, meaning welcoming students to become members of the community and embrace academic values (Wang 2008, p. 751). The value the authors seek to promote is that of intellectual property. Familiarizing students with the academic conventions of quoting and citing sources is essential to make them cognizant of the ethical and logical reasons for crediting scholars for their work (Jamieson, 2008; Maddox, 2008). The ALTE method integrates referencing, vocabulary, and grammar into writing instruction, using low-stakes exercises and formal assignments that serve as learning tools (Gibbs, 2010). In this paper, we discuss how the ALTE method, a systematic, practice-based approach in writing and referencing instruction, is an effective means of minimizing inadvertent plagiarism among lower-level university students. C1 [Mcdonald, Shirley Ann; Adl, Ramine] Univ British Columbia Okanagan, Kelowna, BC, Canada. C3 University of British Columbia; University of British Columbia Okanagan RP Mcdonald, SA (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia Okanagan, Kelowna, BC, Canada. 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PY 2019 VL 16 IS 2 BP 86 EP 99 DI 10.18162/ritpu-2019-v16n2-08 PG 14 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA IW3OM UT WOS:000484891300007 OA gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Zlotnick, C Dryjanska, L Suckerman, S AF Zlotnick, Cheryl Dryjanska, Laura Suckerman, Suzanne TI The Association Between Acculturation Variables and Life Satisfaction Among Israeli Immigrants from Four English-Speaking Countries SO JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES LA English DT Article DE Immigrants; Life satisfaction; Expectations; Acculturation; Diaspora ID FORMER SOVIET-UNION; MULTIPLE IMPUTATION; MISSING-DATA; EXPECTATIONS; ADOLESCENTS; PROFICIENCY; ADAPTATION; SOLIDARITY; MIGRATION; HAPPINESS AB This study's primary purpose was to examine the hypothesis that there would be a positive association between acculturation and life satisfaction for English-speaking diaspora immigrants to Israel regardless of country of origin (after adjusting for demographic characteristics including gender, age, years in the host country, reason for immigration and family support). Informed by Bornstein's Specificity Principle in Acculturation Science, acculturation was defined by levels of: language acquisition, having realised/met expectations, and self-identification with host country. Using a cross-sectional study design, a convenience sample of English-speaking participants was recruited through a link on a well-known English-language internet site targeting immigrants to Israel. Due to the diversity of respondents, only questionnaires completed by immigrants from the following four countries were included (n = 641): Canada (n = 40), South Africa (n = 66), the United Kingdom (n = 132) and the United States (n = 403). Life satisfaction only was linked to the acculturation variable of having a higher level of realised expectations for life after immigration and reporting good health, but not associated with the other acculturation variables of language acquisition or self-identification with host country. While having realised expectations was related to life satisfaction, the number of years in the host country and language acquisition was not. Having realistic expectations (related to greater life satisfaction) may be increased by providing prospective immigrants information on the new country's culture while they are still in the host country and planning their immigration. C1 [Zlotnick, Cheryl] Univ Haifa, Fac Hlth & Welf Sci, Cheryl Spencer Dept Nursing, 199 Aba Khoushy Ave,808, IL-3498838 Haifa, Israel. [Dryjanska, Laura] Biola Univ, Rosemead Sch Psychol, La Mirada, CA 90639 USA. [Suckerman, Suzanne] Anglo List, Haifa, Israel. C3 University of Haifa; Biola University RP Zlotnick, C (corresponding author), Univ Haifa, Fac Hlth & Welf Sci, Cheryl Spencer Dept Nursing, 199 Aba Khoushy Ave,808, IL-3498838 Haifa, Israel. 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Happiness Stud. PD APR PY 2020 VL 21 IS 4 BP 1427 EP 1444 DI 10.1007/s10902-019-00137-3 PG 18 WC Psychology, Multidisciplinary; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Social Sciences - Other Topics GA LG6MN UT WOS:000528212800013 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ramanathan, V Sitharthan, G Pepper, K Wylie, K AF Ramanathan, Vijayasarathi Sitharthan, Gomathi Pepper, Karen Wylie, Kevan TI Masturbatory Behavior and Feelings: An Exploratory Study of Indian Immigrant Men in Australia SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SEXUAL HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Masturbation; Indian; acculturation ID SOUTH ASIAN ADOLESCENTS; SEXUAL DYSFUNCTION; SEMEN LOSS; ACCULTURATION; GENDER; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES; IDENTITY AB Objectives: Sexual problems associated with masturbation (especially intense negative feelings) are commonly reported among Indian subcontinental men. Yet there is a paucity of scientific information about masturbatory behavior and feelings. Much of the available information is either from clinic-based studies or from studies involving young Indians. Methods: The present study, using a community sample of Indian men in Australia, aimed to explore their masturbatory behavior and feelings. Results: Overall, 268 men took part in an online survey, and 221 of these men completed the section on masturbation. Some demographic characteristics of the study sample were comparable to those of the Indian community in Australia. A large proportion (n = 174, 79%) reported that they currently masturbate, while the rest said they never masturbated (n = 9, 4%) or did masturbate in the past but not at present (n = 38, 17%). Among those who currently masturbate, the mean age of onset of masturbation was 14.9years. Married men tended to masturbate less frequently than unmarried men. The most common mode, source of stimuli, and reason for masturbation were using hands (n = 162, 95%), watching erotic material on the Internet (n = 136, 81%), and to gain pleasure (n = 137, 79%), respectively. A high proportion (n = 114, 66%) of Indian men who currently masturbate said that they experienced positive feelings when masturbating. Conclusions: Masturbatory feelings of Indian men were found to differ by length of residence in Australia but not by degree of acculturation or age. The present exploratory study has provided baseline information about masturbation among Indian men and indicates the need for further research. C1 [Ramanathan, Vijayasarathi; Sitharthan, Gomathi; Pepper, Karen; Wylie, Kevan] Univ Sydney, Fac Hlth Sci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. [Ramanathan, Vijayasarathi] SSS Ctr Sexual Hlth Private Ltd, Madras, Tamil Nadu, India. C3 University of Sydney RP Ramanathan, V (corresponding author), Univ Sydney, Fac Hlth Sci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. 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D., 2010, HDB SEXUALITY RELATE NR 59 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 2 U2 11 PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD PI ABINGDON PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND SN 1931-7611 EI 1931-762X J9 INT J SEX HEALTH JI Int. J. Sex. Health PD JAN 1 PY 2014 VL 26 IS 1 BP 25 EP 40 DI 10.1080/19317611.2013.828147 PG 16 WC Psychology, Clinical; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Social Sciences - Other Topics GA AB4TX UT WOS:000331783900003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Eversole, JS Berglas, NF Deardorff, J Constantine, NA AF Eversole, Jillian S. Berglas, Nancy F. Deardorff, Julianna Constantine, Norman A. TI Source of Sex Information and Condom Use Intention Among Latino Adolescents SO HEALTH EDUCATION & BEHAVIOR LA English DT Article DE adolescent; condoms; condom use intention; Latino; sexual health information ID SEXUALITY EDUCATION CURRICULUM; CLUSTER-RANDOMIZED TRIAL; NEGOTIATION STRATEGIES; ACCULTURATION SCALE; HEALTH INFORMATION; SELF-EFFICACY; RISK BEHAVIOR; UNITED-STATES; YOUNG-ADULTS; COMMUNICATION AB Adolescence is a common time for sexual initiation and information seeking about sexual health, yet little is known about how adolescents' sources of information about sex influence their sexual beliefs and behaviors. This is particularly true for Latino adolescents, whose sources of sex information and sexual behaviors are vastly understudied. A survey of ninth-grade Latino adolescents (N = 1,186) was employed to examine the relationship between adolescents' primary source of sex information and their intention to use condoms. The study also examined the potential influences of demographics (age, gender), sociodemographics (socioeconomic status, parent education, and linguistic acculturation), and sexual experience on condom use intention. Among Latino youth, the most commonly reported source of sex information was parents (37.8%), followed by another relative (17.1%), school (13.4%), and friends (11.4%). Hierarchical regression analyses showed that after controlling for other factors, primary source of sex information was significantly associated with condom use intention (p = .042). Hierarchical regression results stratified by gender showed that this relationship remained significant for males (p = .004) but not for females (p = .242). Males who reported friends (odds ratio [OR] = 0.44, p = .003) or the media/Internet (OR = 0.44, p = .008) as their primary sources of sex information, as compared to parents as their primary source, reported significantly lower intention to use condoms. These findings suggest it may be important for Latino adolescents, particularly males, to have additional or other sources for sex information in order to promote healthy sexual behaviors. Alternatively, interventions targeting parents or other family members to improve sexual health communication with adolescent boys may prove essential. C1 [Eversole, Jillian S.; Deardorff, Julianna; Constantine, Norman A.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA. [Berglas, Nancy F.] Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA. [Constantine, Norman A.] Publ Hlth Inst, Oakland, CA USA. C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley; University of California System; University of California San Francisco; Public Health Institute RP Berglas, NF (corresponding author), Univ Calif San Francisco, Adv New Stand Reprod Hlth, 1330 Broadway,Suite 1100, Oakland, CA 94612 USA. EM nancy.berglas@ucsf.edu RI Deardorff, Julianna/ABH-8981-2020 FU Planned Parenthood-Los Angeles; William and Flora Hewlett Foundation; Ford Foundation FX The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by Planned Parenthood-Los Angeles, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and the Ford Foundation. The sponsors had no involvement in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; or in the writing of this article. 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Behav. PD JUN PY 2017 VL 44 IS 3 BP 439 EP 447 DI 10.1177/1090198116671704 PG 9 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA EZ1MP UT WOS:000404475400013 PM 27899688 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Quinn, GP McIntyre, J Vadaparampil, ST AF Quinn, Gwendolyn P. McIntyre, Jessica Vadaparampil, Susan T. TI Preferences for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Information among Mexican, Cuban and Puerto Rican Women at Risk SO PUBLIC HEALTH GENOMICS LA English DT Article DE Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, genetics; Hispanic women; Qualitative research ID HISPANIC WOMEN; FOLIC-ACID; AFRICAN-AMERICAN; HEALTH LITERACY; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES; ACCULTURATION; PERCEPTIONS; BEHAVIORS; LATINAS AB Background: Little is known about the preferences of at-risk Hispanic women to gain information on hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC). Aims: This study sought to qualitatively explore preferences for HBOC information among at-risk Mexican, Puerto Rican and Cuban women and to pilot a mock brochure aimed at Hispanic women. Methods: Hispanic women aged 18-65 years with a personal or family history of breast or ovarian cancer participated in a semi-structured interview. Data were analyzed using a combination of open-coding and content analysis. Results: Fifty-three women participated in the study. For the majority of content areas, there were no major differences between the subethnicities. All women reported discussing cancer with a doctor after a family member had been diagnosed and discussing cancer within their families; however, the content of the discussion varied. Cuban and Puerto Rican women reported using the Internet routinely for health care information while Mexican women said they did not have access to computers and did not use them. All women liked the content and photos in the brochure but Mexican women thought the reading level was too high. Preferences for the spokesperson focused on the need for Spanish-speaking health care providers. Conclusions: While the data show some similarities, such as patterns of cancer discussion and appreciation of the mock brochure, there were differences between the groups on information preferences. In designing HBOC education information for Hispanic audiences, it is important to consider varied channels for dissemination and preferences for specific types of information across subethnicities. Copyright (C) 2010 S. Karger AG, Basel C1 [Quinn, Gwendolyn P.; Vadaparampil, Susan T.] Univ S Florida, Coll Med, Dept Oncol Sci, Tampa, FL USA. [Quinn, Gwendolyn P.; McIntyre, Jessica; Vadaparampil, Susan T.] Univ S Florida, H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr, Hlth Outcomes & Behav Program, Tampa, FL 33682 USA. C3 State University System of Florida; University of South Florida; H Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute; State University System of Florida; University of South Florida RP Vadaparampil, ST (corresponding author), MRC CANCONT, 12902 Magnolia Dr, Tampa, FL 33612 USA. EM susan.vadaparampil@moffitt.org RI Quinn, Gwendolyn/H-7673-2019 OI Quinn, Gwendolyn/0000-0002-4208-9889 FU National Human Genome Research Institute [1 R03 HG003887]; H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute FX Funding for this project was provided by grant 1 R03 HG003887 from the National Human Genome Research Institute. The work contained within this publication was supported in part by the Survey Methods Core Facility at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute. 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Health Genomics PY 2011 VL 14 IS 4-5 BP 248 EP 258 DI 10.1159/000284582 PG 11 WC Genetics & Heredity; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Genetics & Heredity; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA 789FC UT WOS:000292498800007 PM 20150724 OA Green Published, Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Sudo, K Hamamoto, Y AF Sudo, Kyoko Hamamoto, Yoko TI Health behaviors of foreign mothers in Japan regarding their young children and the factors that affect these behaviors: A qualitative study SO JAPAN JOURNAL OF NURSING SCIENCE LA English DT Article DE acculturation; child's health condition; information-seeking behavior; mother's health perception ID MIGRANT; DISPARITIES; COMMUNITY; SERVICES; BARRIERS; ORIGIN; CARE AB Aim The number of foreign residents in Japan is increasing and these residents therefore should no longer be disregarded as members of Japanese society. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the health behaviors of foreign mothers in Japan regarding their children and the factors that affected these behaviors. Methods A qualitative descriptive research design was used, involving a content analysis. Six focus group interviews were conducted with a total of 24 foreign mothers who were members of childrearing circles. Results The health behaviors were classified as "Gathering information about child health management," "Preventing obstructions to child health care," "Perceiving the child's health condition," "Deciding to take the child to a healthcare facility," "Selecting adequate healthcare facilities," and "Managing at home when the child is sick." The factors that affected the health behaviors were classified as "Japanese culture and customs," "Child's health condition," "Culture and customs of the mother's native country," "Family," "Mother's health perception," "Healthcare facility and healthcare provider," "Friends," "Mother's health condition," "Internet," "Becoming accustomed to life in Japan," and "Japanese language ability." Gathering information, preventing obstructions to child health care, and perceiving the child's health condition were the most common behaviors. The main factors that affected the health behaviors were the culture and customs of both Japan and the mother's native country and the child's health condition. Conclusion It is recommended that healthcare professionals support foreign mothers to gather adequate and appropriate information regarding health, particularly child health, considering not only the culture and customs of the mother's native country, but also of the host country. C1 [Sudo, Kyoko; Hamamoto, Yoko] Natl Coll Nursing, 1-2-1 Umezono, Kiyose, Tokyo 2048575, Japan. RP Sudo, K (corresponding author), Natl Coll Nursing, 1-2-1 Umezono, Kiyose, Tokyo 2048575, Japan. EM sudok@adm.ncn.ac.jp FU Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [JP25871167] Funding Source: Medline; Policy-based Medical Services Foundation Funding Source: Medline CR Abbott S, 2007, PUBLIC HEALTH, V121, P935, DOI 10.1016/j.puhe.2007.04.014 ADAY LA, 1981, MED CARE, V19, P4, DOI 10.1097/00005650-198112001-00004 [Anonymous], 1991, RISK AM HLTH HLTH CA [Anonymous], 2007, SOCIAL CAUSES HLTH D [Anonymous], 2014, FOCUS GROUPS PRACTIC [Anonymous], 1996, FOCUS GROUP INTERVIE [Anonymous], FOR RES OP SURV FY20 Berelson B., 1952, CONTENT ANAL COMMUNI Blasco-Hernandez T, 2016, GLOBAL HEALTH ACTION, V9, DOI 10.3402/gha.v9.30201 Bornstein MH, 2004, CHILD DEV, V75, P221, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2004.00665.x Bunketsu Y., 2010, J JPN PRIM CARE ASS, V33, P101, DOI [10.14442/generalist.33.101, DOI 10.14442/GENERALIST.33.101] Busck-Rasmussen M, 2014, MATERN CHILD HLTH J, V18, P2479, DOI 10.1007/s10995-014-1486-z City of Yokohama, 2013, FOR RES OP SURV Czapka EA, 2016, BMC HEALTH SERV RES, V16, DOI 10.1186/s12913-016-1715-9 Elo S, 2008, J ADV NURS, V62, P107, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2007.04569.x Gagnon AJ, 2013, BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, V13, DOI 10.1186/1471-2458-13-471 Hakonsen H, 2014, INT J CLIN PHARM-NET, V36, P1144, DOI 10.1007/s11096-014-0005-z Hannigan A., 2016, DO VARIATIONS DEFINI Hotta M, 2007, PEDIATR INT, V49, P293, DOI 10.1111/j.1442-200X.2007.02356.x Japan Tourism Agency, 2016, VIS TOUR SUPP JAP FU Kilanowski JF, 2013, FAM COMMUNITY HEALTH, V36, P350, DOI 10.1097/FCH.0b013e31829d277e Kilanowski JF, 2010, MCN-AM J MATERN-CHIL, V35, P330, DOI 10.1097/NMC.0b013e3181f0f27a Leininger M. 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J. Nurs. Sci. PD OCT PY 2019 VL 16 IS 4 BP 420 EP 432 DI 10.1111/jjns.12251 PG 13 WC Nursing WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Nursing GA JU1XU UT WOS:000501470900008 PM 30688004 OA Bronze DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Vu, M Huynh, VN Bednarczyk, RA Escoffery, C Ta, D Nguyen, TT Berg, CJ Pikhart, M AF Vu, Milkie Huynh, Victoria N. Bednarczyk, Robert A. Escoffery, Cam Ta, Danny Nguyen, Tien T. Berg, Carla J. Pikhart, Marcel TI Experience and lessons learned from multi-modal internet-based recruitment of US Vietnamese into research SO PLOS ONE LA English DT Article ID LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENCY; ASIAN-AMERICAN POPULATIONS; COMMUNITY-ENGAGED RESEARCH; UNITED-STATES; HEALTH; CANCER; LATINO; VULNERABILITY; IMMIGRANTS; COLLECTION AB Background Asian-Americans are one of the most understudied racial/ethnic minority populations. To increase representation of Asian subgroups, researchers have traditionally relied on data collection at community venues and events. However, the COVID-19 pandemic has created serious challenges for in-person data collection. In this case study, we describe multi-modal strategies for online recruitment of U.S. Vietnamese parents, compare response rates and participant characteristics among strategies, and discuss lessons learned. Methods We recruited 408 participants from community-based organizations (CBOs) (n = 68), Facebook groups (n = 97), listservs (n = 4), personal network (n = 42), and snowball sampling (n = 197). Using chi-square tests and one-way analyses of variance, we compared participants recruited through different strategies regarding sociodemographic characteristics, acculturation-related characteristics, and mobile health usage. Results The overall response rate was 71.8% (range: 51.5% for Vietnamese CBOs to 86.6% for Facebook groups). Significant differences exist for all sociodemographic and almost all acculturation-related characteristics among recruitment strategies. Notably, CBO-recruited participants were the oldest, had lived in the U.S. for the longest duration, and had the lowest Vietnamese language ability. We found some similarities between Facebook-recruited participants and those referred by Facebook-recruited participants. Mobile health usage was high and did not vary based on recruitment strategies. Challenges included encountering fraudulent responses (e.g., non-Vietnamese). Perceived benefits and trust appeared to facilitate recruitment. Conclusions Facebook and snowball sampling may be feasible strategies to recruit U.S. Vietnamese. Findings suggest the potential for mobile-based research implementation. Perceived benefits and trust could encourage participation and may be related to cultural ties. Attention should be paid to recruitment with CBOs and handling fraudulent responses. C1 [Vu, Milkie; Escoffery, Cam] Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Behav Social Hlth Educ Sci, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. [Huynh, Victoria N.] Emory Univ, Emory Coll Arts & Sci, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. [Bednarczyk, Robert A.] Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Hubert Dept Global Hlth, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. [Bednarczyk, Robert A.; Escoffery, Cam] Emory Univ, Winship Canc Inst, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. [Ta, Danny] Emory Univ, Nell Hodgson Woodruff Sch Nursing, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. [Nguyen, Tien T.] Mt Holyoke Coll, S Hadley, MA 01075 USA. [Berg, Carla J.] George Washington Univ, Milken Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Prevent & Community Hlth, Washington, DC USA. [Berg, Carla J.] George Washington Univ, George Washington Canc Ctr, Washington, DC USA. C3 Emory University; Rollins School Public Health; Emory University; Emory University; Rollins School Public Health; Emory University; Emory University; Mount Holyoke College; George Washington University; George Washington University RP Vu, M (corresponding author), Emory Univ, Rollins Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Behav Social Hlth Educ Sci, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA. EM milkie.vu@emory.edu RI Vu, Milkie/AAW-5755-2020; Bednarczyk, Robert/L-9403-2017 OI Vu, Milkie/0000-0003-0230-473X; Bednarczyk, Robert/0000-0002-6812-0928; Escoffery, Cam/0000-0003-4445-009X FU American Psychological Foundation; American Association for Cancer Education 2019 Grant in Research, Education, Advocacy, and Direct Service (READS); Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues; Professional Development Support Fund at Emory University; Healthcare Innovation Program Student-Initiated Project Grant at the Georgia Clinical & Translational Science Alliance (CTSA); National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [UL1TR002378]; Center for AIDS Research at Emory University [P30AI050409]; US National Cancer Institute [5F31CA243220-02, R01CA215155-01A1, R01CA179422-01, R01CA239178-01A1, 1R37CA234119-01]; Society of Public Health Education; US Fogarty International Center/National Institutes of Health [1R01TW010664-01]; US National Institute on Environmental Health Science/Fogarty International Center [D43ES030927-01]; National Cancer Institute [3P30CA076292]; 2020-2021 PEO Scholar Award FX This work is supported by the American Psychological Foundation 2019 Visionary Grant and the American Association for Cancer Education 2019 Grant in Research, Education, Advocacy, and Direct Service (READS), the Grants-in-Aid program from the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, the Professional Development Support Fund at Emory University, and the Healthcare Innovation Program Student-Initiated Project Grant at the Georgia Clinical & Translational Science Alliance (CTSA). The Georgia CTSA is supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number UL1TR002378. Our data collection receives support from the Center for AIDS Research at Emory University (P30AI050409). Ms. Vu is supported by the US National Cancer Institute (5F31CA243220-02), a 2020-2021 PEO Scholar Award, and the 20202021 Student Fellowship in Patient Engagement from the Society of Public Health Education. Dr. Berg is supported by the US National Cancer Institute (R01CA215155-01A1; R01CA179422-01; R01CA239178-01A1), the US Fogarty International Center/National Institutes of Health (1R01TW010664-01), and the US National Institute on Environmental Health Science/Fogarty International Center (D43ES030927-01). Dr. Bednarczyk is supported in part by the US National Cancer Institute (1R37CA234119-01). Openaccess publication support was made possible in part by the Research Reimbursement Award from grant 3P30CA076292 (Geographic Management of Cancer Health Disparities Program (GMaP) Region 2) funded by the National Cancer Institute. 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WOS:000684737400072 PM 34388178 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Wanda, JFE Nair, GV Periayya, T Wilson, S AF Wanda, Judith Flora Etabale Nair, Govindan Velaithan Periayya, Thinavan Wilson, Sharon TI Social networking and mobile phone usage of East African students in Malaysia SO JOURNAL OF AFRICAN MEDIA STUDIES LA English DT Article DE mobile phone; impact; dependency; social networking; interpersonal communication; interaction ID ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; INTERNET; ISSUES; IMPACT AB With the current development in technology, mobile phones have become progressively more popular as they are one of the frequently used means of communication that people rely on because of their features. While people find mobile phones convenient and useful, international students in foreign countries tend to appreciate them more and are more dependent on them in order to maintain their social networks. The literature states that students from East Africa carry along their own culture with them, making it difficult for them to accept and adapt to the new culture easily. This includes meeting face to face in small areas and groups where friendships are formed through frequent interaction. Based on a survey conducted in various private universities in the Klang Valley where foreign students of East African origin are studying, students' mobile phone use for social networking was examined. The results showed that there was a positive significant relationship between variables such as interaction, interpersonal communication and social networking for maintenance of social network; however, there was no significant difference in mobile phone dependency for social networking among university students of East African origin and the duration of stay in Malaysia. Although they may be unable to interact in person, social networking proved useful to strengthen relationships that already exist and enhanced the feelings of closeness to others. As technology has advanced, there have been adjustments in the users' attitudes towards particular technologies, hence this has generated new social and cultural phenomena. This phenomenon has in a way changed the way mobile phones evolve as they represent social construction of technology. This social construction of the mobile phone is seen in the symbiotic relationship between the users of the technology. Users such as these students respond to the advancement of technologies such as mobile phones, which in turn has seen them develop social and cultural changes. C1 [Wanda, Judith Flora Etabale] St Augustine Univ, Raleigh, NC 27610 USA. [Nair, Govindan Velaithan; Periayya, Thinavan; Wilson, Sharon] Univ Tunku Abdul Rahman, Dept Mass Commun, Fac Creat Ind, JalanSg Long, Cheras 43000, Kajang, Malaysia. C3 St. Augustine's University RP Wanda, JFE (corresponding author), Univ Tunku Abdul Rahman, Dept Mass Commun, Fac Creat Ind, JalanSg Long, Cheras 43000, Kajang, Malaysia. 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PD JUN 1 PY 2018 VL 10 IS 2 BP 185 EP 199 DI 10.1386/jams.10.2.185_1 PG 15 WC Cultural Studies; Communication; Film, Radio, Television WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) SC Cultural Studies; Communication; Film, Radio & Television GA HA9WC UT WOS:000450657800003 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Montesinos-Segura, R Maticorena-Quevedo, J Chung-Delgado, K Pereyra-Elias, R Taype-Rondan, A Mayta-Tristan, P AF Montesinos-Segura, Renee Maticorena-Quevedo, Jesus Chung-Delgado, Kocfa Pereyra-Elias, Renee Taype-Rondan, Alvaro Mayta-Tristan, Percy TI Place of origin associated with depressive symptoms in health professionals performing social health service in Ancash, Peru, 2015 SO RURAL AND REMOTE HEALTH LA English DT Article DE depressive symptoms; social health service; health personnel; Peru ID PRIMARY-CARE PHYSICIANS; MENTAL-HEALTH; MAJOR DEPRESSION; WORK STRESS; PHQ-2; INTERVENTIONS; VALIDATION; WORKPLACE; VALIDITY; INTERNET AB Introduction: Health professionals performing their social health service (SHS) in rural communities could be at risk of developing depression. Moreover, those who migrate from farther places to perform their SHS could have an increased risk. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between place of origin and the presence of depressive symptoms, in health professionals performing rural social health service (SHS) in Ancash, Peru. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study. During April 2015, a survey was applied to health professionals performing SHS in the Peruvian Ministry of Health (MINSA) facilities in Ancash. The main outcome was the presence of depressive symptoms, defined as a score points in the Patient Health Questionnaire-2. The main exposure was the place of origin, defined as the place where the subjects completed their undergraduate professional studies (Ancash, Lima city or others). Poisson regressions with robust variance were performed to calculate crude and adjusted prevalence ratios (PR and aPR) and their 95% confidence interval (95%Cl). Results: From 573 health professionals performing their SHS in MINSA in Ancash, 347 were included in the study. The mean age was 27.2 +/- 4.5 years, 78.7% were women, and 14.7% scored positive for depressive symptoms. Those who had completed their undergraduate professional studies in Lima city had a higher prevalence of presence of depressive symptoms compared to those who did in Ancash (aPR=2.59, 95%Cl=1.23-5.45). Conclusions: Those who completed their undergraduate professional studies in Lima had a higher prevalence of depressive symptoms than those who did in Ancash. Possible explanations include the difficulty in visiting family and friends, acculturation, and lack of Quechua language proficiency. C1 [Montesinos-Segura, Renee] Univ Nacl San Antonio Abad Cusco, Escuela Med Humana, Cuzco, Peru. [Maticorena-Quevedo, Jesus; Chung-Delgado, Kocfa; Pereyra-Elias, Renee] Univ Peruana Ciencias Aplicadas, Escuela Med, Lima, Peru. [Taype-Rondan, Alvaro] Univ San Ignacio de Loyola, Lima, Peru. [Mayta-Tristan, Percy] Univ Cient Sur, Direcc Gen Invest Desarrollo & Innovac, Lima, Peru. C3 Universidad Nacional de San Antonio Abad del Cusco; Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas (UPC); Universidad San Ignacio de Loyola; Universidad Cientifica del Sur (CIENTIFICA) RP Mayta-Tristan, P (corresponding author), Univ Cient Sur, Direcc Gen Invest Desarrollo & Innovac, Lima, Peru. EM renee.pereyra.elias@gmail.com; p.mayta@gmail.com RI Mayta-Tristan, Percy/D-8587-2011; Pereyra-Elías, Reneé/AAP-5975-2021 OI Mayta-Tristan, Percy/0000-0002-0861-6606; Pereyra-Elias, Renee/0000-0001-6398-4287; Maticorena, Jesus/0000-0002-0811-9853; Taype-Rondan, Alvaro/0000-0001-8758-0463 CR Arroll B, 2010, ANN FAM MED, V8, P348, DOI 10.1370/afm.1139 Bender Ash, 2008, Curr Psychiatry Rep, V10, P73, DOI 10.1007/s11920-008-0013-6 Bhugra D, 2014, EUR PSYCHIAT, V29, P107, DOI 10.1016/j.eurpsy.2014.01.003 Bracken Michele Irene, 2010, Issues Ment Health Nurs, V31, P137, DOI 10.3109/01612840903470609 Calderón María, 2012, Rev. perú. med. exp. salud publica, V29, P578 Chagas MHN, 2011, AGING MENT HEALTH, V15, P838, DOI 10.1080/13607863.2011.569482 Christensen H, 2004, BRIT MED J, V328, P265, DOI 10.1136/bmj.37945.566632.EE da Silva ATC, 2015, SOC PSYCH PSYCH EPID, V50, P1347, DOI 10.1007/s00127-015-1039-9 Couser GP, 2008, J OCCUP ENVIRON MED, V50, P411, DOI 10.1097/JOM.0b013e318168efe2 Galan-Rodas Eden, 2011, Rev Peru Med Exp Salud Publica, V28, P277 Galán-Rodas Edén, 2010, Rev. perú. med. exp. salud publica, V27, P483, DOI 10.1590/S1726-46342010000300028 Garcia-Ramirez M, 2011, AM J COMMUN PSYCHOL, V47, P86, DOI 10.1007/s10464-010-9372-3 Geiger-Brown Jeanne, 2007, Home Health Care Serv Q, V26, P59, DOI 10.1300/J027v26n01_05 Goldberg RJ, 2001, PSYCHIATR SERV, V52, P1639, DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.52.12.1639 Knuth BS, 2016, ACTA NEUROPSYCHIATR, V28, P165, DOI 10.1017/neu.2015.58 Knuth BS, 2015, CIENC SAUDE COLETIVA, V20, P2481, DOI 10.1590/1413-81232015208.05062014 Kolves K, 2013, J NERV MENT DIS, V201, P987, DOI 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000047 Kroenke K, 2003, MED CARE, V41, P1284, DOI 10.1097/01.MLR.0000093487.78664.3C Mayta-Tristán Percy, 2014, Rev. perú. med. exp. salud publica, V31, P781 Mejia Christian R, 2013, Rev. perú. med. exp. salud publica, V30, P220 Mudgal J, 2006, SALUD MENT, V29, P1 Piazza M, 2005, REV PERU MED EXP SAL, V2014, P30, DOI [10.17843/rpmesp.2014.311.5, DOI 10.17843/RPMESP.2014.311.5] Santos-Revilla Gabriela, 2016, Rev. perú. med. exp. salud publica, V33, P183, DOI 10.17843/rpmesp.2016.331.2021 Seo JG, 2015, J HEADACHE PAIN, V16, DOI 10.1186/s10194-015-0552-2 Shen LL, 2012, INT J PSYCHIAT MED, V44, P257, DOI 10.2190/PM.44.3.f Spek V, 2007, PSYCHOL MED, V37, P319, DOI 10.1017/S0033291706008944 Taylor WD, 2013, MOL PSYCHIATR, V18, P963, DOI 10.1038/mp.2013.20 Thommasen HV, 2001, CAN FAM PHYSICIAN, V47, P747 Unrath M, 2012, DTSCH ARZTEBL INT, V109, P201, DOI 10.3238/arztebl.2012.0201 Vásquez-Sullca Roy R, 2013, Rev. perú. med. exp. salud publica, V30, P344 Virtanen M, 2007, J AFFECT DISORDERS, V98, P189, DOI 10.1016/j.jad.2006.05.034 WHO, 2017, DEPR OTH COMM MENT D NR 32 TC 2 Z9 2 U1 0 U2 2 PU AUSTRALIAN RURAL HEALTH EDUC NETWORK PI DEAKIN WEST PA PO BOX 242, DEAKIN WEST, ACT 2600, AUSTRALIA SN 1445-6354 J9 RURAL REMOTE HEALTH JI Rural Remote Health PY 2018 VL 18 IS 2 AR 4331 DI 10.22605/RRH4331 PG 10 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA GL6BW UT WOS:000437263300012 PM 29734813 OA Green Submitted, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Ho, MJ Shaw, K Liu, TH Norris, J Chiu, YT AF Ho, Ming-Jung Shaw, Kevin Liu, Tzu-Hung Norris, Jessie Chiu, Yu-Ting TI Equal, global, local: discourses in Taiwan's international medical graduate debate SO MEDICAL EDUCATION LA English DT Article ID CHALLENGES AB ContextWith the globalisation of medicine, the role of international medical graduates (IMGs) has expanded. Nonetheless, the experiences of native-born IMGs remain under-researched. In Taiwan, public controversy has unfolded around IMGs educated in Poland, calling into question the meaning(s) of equality in policy and medicine. In focusing on the return of IMGs to their countries of origin, this study adds to the growing literature concerning equality and globalisation in medical education. ObjectivesThe primary research aim was to analyse how stakeholders in the IMG debate use equality in their arguments. The authors set out to frame the dispute within the recent history of Taiwanese medical governance. An overarching objective was to contribute a critical, historical view of how discourses of globalisation and equality construct different policy approaches to international medical education. MethodsThe authors performed a critical discourse analysis of a public policy dispute in Taiwan, assembling an archive from online interactions, government reports and news articles. Coding focused on stakeholders' uses of equality to generate broader discourses. ResultsInternational and domestic Taiwanese students conceived of equality differently, referencing both equality of opportunity' and equality of outcome' within localisation and globalisation frameworks, respectively. The dominance of localisation discourse is reflected in hostile online rhetoric towards Poland-educated IMGs. ConclusionsRhetorical disagreements over equality in medical education trace shifting state policies, from earlier attempts to remove barriers for IMGs to the present-day push to regulate IMGs for acculturation and quality assurance. The global Internet had a double-sided influence, facilitating both democratic political mobilization and the spread of hate speech. The policy debate in Taiwan mirrors discourses in Canada, where IMGs are likewise conceived either as globally competent physicians or as lacking in merit and technical competence. Future research could investigate the discursive formation and evidential basis of policies regulating international medical education. Discuss ideas arising from the article at discuss. C1 [Ho, Ming-Jung; Shaw, Kevin; Liu, Tzu-Hung; Norris, Jessie; Chiu, Yu-Ting] Natl Taiwan Univ, Coll Med, Dept Med Educ & Bioeth, Taipei 100, Taiwan. C3 National Taiwan University RP Ho, MJ (corresponding author), Natl Taiwan Univ, Coll Med, Dept Med Educ & Bioeth, 1 Ren Ai Rd,Sect 1, Taipei 100, Taiwan. EM mjho@ntu.edu.tw RI Ho, Ming-Jung/AAS-7738-2020 OI Liu, Tzu-Hung/0000-0003-2427-0999 FU National Science Council, Taiwan FX National Science Council, Taiwan. 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PD JAN PY 2015 VL 49 IS 1 BP 48 EP 59 DI 10.1111/medu.12619 PG 12 WC Education, Scientific Disciplines; Health Care Sciences & Services WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Education & Educational Research; Health Care Sciences & Services GA AX5RX UT WOS:000346985900013 PM 25545573 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kim, H Chan-Olmsted, S Chen, H AF Kim, Hyehyun Chan-Olmsted, Sylvia Chen, Huan TI COVID-19 information seeking behavior versus value perception among US ethnic/racial minorities: differences and vaccination implications SO INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & PEOPLE LA English DT Article; Early Access DE COVID-19; Ethnic; racial minorities; Identity; Audience study; Information value ID HEALTH INFORMATION; SOCIAL IDENTITY; SELECTIVE EXPOSURE; CULTURAL-IDENTITY; INTERNET; ACCULTURATION; COMMUNICATION; KNOWLEDGE; LITERACY; RELIGION AB PurposeThis study explores information behavior and perception and vaccination among America's three largest ethnic minorities, Hispanic, Black/African American and Asian, in COVID-19 context. Information behavior and perception are investigated from cultural and demographic characteristics, while vaccination is explored from COVID-19 related information behavior and utility/value of COVID-19 vaccine information.Design/methodology/approachUsing Qualtrics survey panel, a national survey of America's Hispanic, Black/African American and Asian population was conducted to better understand the impact of cultural and demographic factors on COVID-19 related information. Data were collected in Fall 2021. Multiple and logistic regression were conducted to analyze data.FindingsResults show that cultural factors (i.e. cultural identity, social identity, social capital and religiousness) exert significant impact on information value and seeking across all three minority groups, while some demographic factors, Republicanism and age, also significantly predict COVID-19 related information seeking and value for Black/African Americans and Hispanics, but less for Asian Americans. Lastly, information value was found to significantly predict vaccine status, willingness and eagerness, the three facets of vaccination as conceptualized in this study, for top three racial/ethic minorities.Originality/valueThe finding of this study reveal that there are variations in terms of the level and type of attachment to one's culture/social group in COVID-19 informational context. Between the three groups, granular differences were observed regarding the relationship between cultural factors and perceived COVID-19 information value. While cultural identity is most associated with African Americans, social capital is most evident for the Asian Americans, but social identity was the strongest predictor among Hispanics. Thus, this study offers important strategic insights into a unique population sample to better understand the impact of COVID-19 related information perception and vaccination implication. 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Technol. People PD 2022 DEC 9 PY 2022 DI 10.1108/ITP-02-2022-0107 EA DEC 2022 PG 21 WC Information Science & Library Science WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Information Science & Library Science GA 6U1GQ UT WOS:000894118100001 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Merianos, AL Mahabee-Gittens, M Montemayor, BN Sherman, LD Goidel, RK Bergeron, CD Smith, ML AF Merianos, Ashley L. Mahabee-Gittens, Melinda Montemayor, Benjamin N. Sherman, Ledric D. Goidel, R. Kirby Bergeron, Caroline D. Smith, Matthew Lee TI Current tobacco use patterns associated with healthcare utilization among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic men with chronic conditions SO ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS LA English DT Article DE Tobacco; Smoking; Ethnic minorities; Health inequalities; Comorbidity ID EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT; CIGARETTE-SMOKING; ADULTS; ACCULTURATION; ENGLISH; SMOKERS AB Introduction: Tobacco use disparities persist among U.S. adults who are male, racially/ethnically diverse, and have chronic conditions. This study assessed current tobacco use patterns associated with past year healthcare utilization among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic men >= 40 years old with >= 1 chronic condition.Methods: Data were collected from a sample of 1,904 non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic men from across the U.S. using an internet-delivered survey. Participants were categorized into four tobacco use groups: nontobacco users, exclusive cigarette smokers, dualtobacco users (cigarettes + one other tobacco product), and polytobacco users (cigarettes + >= 2 other tobacco products). Logistic regression analyses were conducted to assess current tobacco use patterns with past year primary care visits, emergency department (ED) visits, and overnight hospital stays. Adjusted models included participants' age, race/ethnicity, education level, marital status, health insurance coverage, body mass index, and number of chronic conditions.Results: Relative to nontobacco users, exclusive cigarette smokers were at decreased odds of having a past year primary care visit (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.68, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.47-0.99). Exclusive cigarette smokers (AOR = 1.66, 95%CI = 1.25-2.19), dualtobacco users (AOR = 1.75, 95%CI = 1.23-2.50), and polytobacco users (AOR = 4.10, 95%CI = 2.46-6.84) were at increased odds of having a past year ED visit compared to nontobacco users. Additionally, polytobacco users were at increased odds of having a past year overnight hospital stay (AOR = 2.72, 95%CI = 1.73-4.29) compared to nontobacco users.Conclusions: Findings suggest current tobacco use patterns are uniquely associated with past year healthcare utilization among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic men, while taking into consideration important factors including complex disease profiles. C1 [Merianos, Ashley L.] Univ Cincinnati, Sch Human Serv, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA. [Mahabee-Gittens, Melinda] Univ Cincinnati, Cincinnati Childrens Hosp Med Ctr, Div Emergency Med, Coll Med, 3333 Burnet Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45229 USA. [Montemayor, Benjamin N.; Sherman, Ledric D.; Smith, Matthew Lee] Texas A&M Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Behav, 212 Adriance Lab Rd, College Stn, TX 77843 USA. [Goidel, R. Kirby] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Polit Sci, 4348 TAMU, College Stn, TX 77843 USA. [Bergeron, Caroline D.] Univ Ottawa, LIFE Res Inst, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada. C3 University System of Ohio; University of Cincinnati; Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center; University System of Ohio; University of Cincinnati; Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University College Station; Texas A&M Health Science Center; Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University College Station; University of Ottawa RP Merianos, AL (corresponding author), Univ Cincinnati, Sch Human Serv, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA. EM ashley.merianos@uc.edu; melinda.mahabee-gittens@cchmc.org; bnmontemayor@tamu.edu; lsherman@tamu.edu; kgoidel@tamu.edu; caroline@bergeron.ca; matthew.smith@tamu.edu OI Montemayor, Benjamin/0000-0002-3330-1323; Bergeron, Caroline D./0000-0002-7238-4213 FU Texas AM University; National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIH) [K01DA044313]; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH) [R21ES032161, R01ES030743, R01ES027815] FX This work was supported by the Texas A & M University through their Texas A & M Triads for Transformation (T3) initiative. This work was supported, in part, by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIH Grant Number K01DA044313) and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIH Grant Numbers R21ES032161, R01ES030743, and R01ES027815) . The corresponding author affirms that she has listed everyone who contributed significantly to the work. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily repre-sent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. Contributors: ALM conceptualized and designed the study, interpreted the data, and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. EMMG conceptualized and designed the study and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. BNM conceptualized and designed the study and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. LDS conceptualized and designed the study, collected the data, and revised the manuscript for critically important intellectual content. RKG conceptualized and designed the study, collected the data, and revised the manuscript for critically important intellectual content. CDB conceptualized and designed the study and revised the manuscript for critically important intellectual content. MLS conceptualized and designed the study, collected the data, conducted the statistical analysis, and revised the manuscript for critically important intellectual content. All authors contributed to and have approved the final manuscript. 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Behav. PD AUG PY 2023 VL 143 AR 107695 DI 10.1016/j.addbeh.2023.107695 EA MAR 2023 PG 8 WC Psychology, Clinical; Substance Abuse WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Psychology; Substance Abuse GA D5IM5 UT WOS:000969068900001 PM 37001260 DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Chen, YY Tsai, CW Biddle, L Niederkrotenthaler, T Wu, KCC Gunnell, D AF Chen, Ying-Yeh Tsai, Chi-Wei Biddle, Lucy Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas Wu, Kevin Chien-Chang Gunnell, David TI Newspaper reporting and the emergence of charcoal burning suicide in Taiwan: A mixed methods approach SO JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS LA English DT Article DE Charcoal burning suicide; Media; Newspaper; Mixed methods; Acculturation; Taiwan ID MEDIA AB Background: It has been suggested that extensive media reporting of charcoal burning suicide was a key factor in the rapid spread of this novel method in many East Asian countries. But very few empirical studies have explored the relationship between media reporting and the emergence of this new method of suicide. Aims: We investigated the changing pattern of media reporting of charcoal burning suicides in Taiwan during 1998-2002 when this method of suicide increased most rapidly, assessing whether the characteristics of media reporting were associated with the changing incidence of suicide using this method. Methods: A mixed method approach, combining quantitative and qualitative analysis of newspaper content during 1998-2002 was used. We compared differences in reporting characteristics before and after the rapid increase in charcoal burning suicide. Point-biserial and Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated to quantify the associations between the media item content and changes in suicide rates. Results: During the period when charcoal burning suicide increased rapidly, the number of reports per suicide was considerably higher than during the early stage (0.31 vs. 0.10). Detailed reporting of this new method was associated with a post-reporting increase in suicides using the method. Qualitative analysis of news items revealed that the content of reports of suicide by charcoal burning changed gradually; in the early stages of the epidemic (1999-2000) there was convergence in the terminology used to report charcoal burning deaths, later reports gave detailed descriptions of the setting in which the death occurred (2001) and finally the method was glamourized and widely publicized (2001-2002). Limitations: Our analysis was restricted to newspaper reports and did not include TV or the Internet. Conclusions: Newspaper reporting was associated with the evolution and establishment of charcoal burning suicide. Working with media and close monitoring of changes in the incidence of suicide using a new method might help prevent a suicide epidemic such as charcoal burning suicide seen in Taiwan. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. C1 [Chen, Ying-Yeh; Tsai, Chi-Wei] Taipei City Hosp, Taipei City Psychiat Ctr, Taipei, Taiwan. [Chen, Ying-Yeh] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Inst Publ Hlth, Taipei 112, Taiwan. [Chen, Ying-Yeh] Natl Yang Ming Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Taipei 112, Taiwan. [Biddle, Lucy; Gunnell, David] Univ Bristol, Sch Social & Community Med, Bristol, Avon, England. [Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas] Med Univ Vienna, Inst Social Med, Ctr Publ Hlth, Suicide Res Unit, Vienna, Austria. [Wu, Kevin Chien-Chang] Natl Taiwan Univ, Sch Med, Coll Med, Dept & Grad Inst Med Educ & Bioeth, Taipei 10764, Taiwan. [Wu, Kevin Chien-Chang] Natl Taiwan Univ Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Taipei, Taiwan. [Tsai, Chi-Wei] Natl Cheng Kung Univ, Coll Med, Dept Publ Hlth, Tainan 70101, Taiwan. C3 Taipei City Hospital; National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University; National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University; University of Bristol; Medical University of Vienna; National Taiwan University; National Taiwan University; National Taiwan University Hospital; National Cheng Kung University RP Wu, KCC (corresponding author), 1 Changde St, Taipei 10048, Taiwan. EM ccwu88@ntu.edu.tw RI Gunnell, David/ABE-6653-2020; Chen, Ying-Yeh/AAY-1478-2021; Tsai, Chi-wei/AAP-9609-2020 OI Gunnell, David/0000-0002-0829-6470; WU, KEVIN CHIEN-CHANG/0000-0003-3685-1731; Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas/0000-0001-9550-628X; Chen, Ying-Yeh/0000-0001-5543-5704 FU National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0512-10068] Funding Source: researchfish CR Altman DG, 2009, PLOS MED, V6, DOI DOI 10.1371/JOURNAL.PMED.1000097 Chan KPM, 2005, BRIT J PSYCHIAT, V186, P67, DOI 10.1192/bjp.186.1.67 Chang SS, 2015, SOC PSYCH PSYCH EPID, V50, P1451, DOI 10.1007/s00127-015-1057-7 Chang SS, 2014, PLOS MED, V11, DOI 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001622 Chang SS, 2010, SOC PSYCH PSYCH EPID, V45, P143, DOI 10.1007/s00127-009-0049-x Chang SS, 2010, PLOS MED, V7, DOI 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000212 Chen YY, 2015, SOC PSYCH PSYCH EPID, V50, P227, DOI 10.1007/s00127-014-0910-4 Chen YY, 2013, PLOS ONE, V8, DOI [10.1371/journal.pone.0059263, 10.1371/journal.pone.0055000] Chen YY, 2012, CRISIS, V33, P144, DOI 10.1027/0227-5910/a000118 Chung WSD, 2001, PSYCHIATR SERV, V52, P836, DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.52.6.836 Creswell J. 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Affect. Disord. PD MAR 15 PY 2016 VL 193 BP 355 EP 361 DI 10.1016/j.jad.2015.12.041 PG 7 WC Clinical Neurology; Psychiatry WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Neurosciences & Neurology; Psychiatry GA DD0BT UT WOS:000369586000050 PM 26796236 OA Green Submitted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Gee, GC de Castro, AB Crespi, C Wang, M Hing, A Bacong, A Llave, K AF Gee, Gilbert C. de Castro, A. B. Crespi, Catherine Wang, May Hing, Anna Bacong, Adrian Llave, Karen TI Pre-acculturation as a risk factor for obesity: Findings from the Health of Philippine Emigrants Study (HoPES) SO SSM-POPULATION HEALTH LA English DT Article DE Immigration; Obesity; International; Theory ID BODY-MASS INDEX; WAIST-HIP RATIO; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; ASIAN IMMIGRANTS; LIFE-COURSE; CIRCUMFERENCE; OVERWEIGHT; US; ASSOCIATION; BEHAVIORS AB Immigrants to the United States may have an advantage in terms of healthier weight, but tend to gain excessive weight after arrival, and may suffer from obesity and related health conditions. Acculturation theory suggests that this increase in obesity risk is due to adoption of unhealthy western dietary behaviors, and assumes that "eastern/traditional" dietary behaviors prior to migration are healthier. While this assumption is supported by studies conducted several decades ago, the phenomenon of globalization that has risen since the 1990s has increased exposure to western ideas and behaviors in communities worldwide. Hence, today's immigrants are more likely to have already adopted less healthy behaviors that increase obesity risk prior to their arrival in the U.S., a phenomenon we term "pre-acculturation." The present study investigates the role of pre-acculturation in obesity development among immigrants from the Philippines. Data come from the Health of Philippine Emigrants Study, fielded in 2017 (n = 1632). Pre-acculturation was measured with English proficiency, preparation to migrate, receiving care packages, texting, telephone, or internet contact with friends/family in the U.S. Outcomes included the body mass index (BMI, kg/m(2)), waist circumference (WC, cm), waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) and waist-to-hip-ratio (WHR). Covariates included age, gender, education, financial strain, physical activity, and diet. Migrants reported greater English proficiency, preparation, and a slightly lower WHtR than non-migrants, but did not differ on BMI, WC, or WHR. Preparation was associated with greater BMI, WC, and WHtR, and the effects of preparation status differed by migration status. Among migrants, more preparation was associated with greater BMI, WC, and WtHR. Further, among non-migrants, texting and telephone communications was related to lower BMI, WC, and WHR. In summary, pre-acculturation may be a risk factor for obesity in the Philippines, suggesting that binary notions of "Western" versus "eastern/traditional" cultures may be too simplistic. C1 [Gee, Gilbert C.; Crespi, Catherine; Wang, May; Hing, Anna; Bacong, Adrian; Llave, Karen] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA. [de Castro, A. B.] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA. C3 University of California System; University of California Los Angeles; University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle RP Gee, GC (corresponding author), Univ Calif Los Angeles, Fielding Sch Publ Hlth, 650 Charles E Young Dr South Room 46-081c, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA. EM gilgee@ucla.edu RI Gee, Gilbert/ISB-3129-2023 OI Bacong, Adrian/0000-0003-0157-4754 FU U.S. National Institutes of Health [1R01HD083574-01A1]; Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) [P2C-HD041022]; Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development research infrastructure grant [P2C HD042828] FX This study was supported by funding from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (1R01HD083574-01A1). We are grateful to the California Center for Population Research at UCLA (CCPR) for general support. CCPR receives population research infrastructure funding (P2C-HD041022) from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). Partial support for this research came from a Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development research infrastructure grant, P2C HD042828, to the Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology at the University of Washington. We thank the Commission on Filipinos Overseas and their staff, especiallyRegina Galias, Ivy Miravalles, Golda Myra Roma, and Paul Vincent Avecilla,without whom this research would not be possible. We also thank Nanette Lee Mayol, Midea Kabamalan, Anna Vivas, Elma P. Laguna, Christian Joy Cruz, Lorna Perez, Delia Carba, Klarrines Tanalago, Vanessa Medina, and Larry Tagalog for their insights and assistance with this project. 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Health PD DEC PY 2019 VL 9 AR 100482 DI 10.1016/j.ssmph.2019.100482 PG 9 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health GA JQ4CC UT WOS:000498893900020 PM 31709297 OA Green Published, gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Dennis, CL Hodnett, E Kenton, L Weston, J Zupancic, J Stewart, DE Kiss, A AF Dennis, C-L Hodnett, E. Kenton, L. Weston, J. Zupancic, J. Stewart, D. E. Kiss, A. TI Effect of peer support on prevention of postnatal depression among high risk women: multisite randomised controlled trial SO BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL LA English DT Article ID STRUCTURED CLINICAL INTERVIEW; DSM-III-R; POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION; SOCIAL SUPPORT; ACCULTURATIVE STRESS; JAPANESE WOMEN; MOTHERS; IMPACT; TELEPHONE; SYMPTOMS AB Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of telephone based peer support in the prevention of postnatal depression. Design Multisite randomised controlled trial. Setting Seven health regions across Ontario, Canada. Participants 701 women in the first two weeks postpartum identified as high risk for postnatal depression with the Edinburgh postnatal depression scale and randomised with an internet based randomisation service. Intervention Proactive individualised telephone based peer ( mother to mother) support, initiated within 48- 72 hours of randomisation, provided by a volunteer recruited from the community who had previously experienced and recovered from self reported postnatal depression and attended a four hour training session. Main outcome measures Edinburgh postnatal depression scale, structured clinical interview- depression, state- trait anxiety inventory, UCLA loneliness scale, and use of health services. Results After web based screening of 21 470 women, 701 ( 72%) eligible mothers were recruited. A blinded research nurse followed up more than 85% by telephone, including 613 at 12 weeks and 600 at 24 weeks postpartum. At 12 weeks, 14% ( 40/ 297) of women in the intervention group and 25% ( 78/ 315) in the control group had an Edinburgh postnatal depression scale score > 12 (X-2= 12.5, P< 0.001; number need to treat 8.8, 95% confidence interval 5.9 to 19.6; relative risk reduction 0.46, 95% confidence interval 0.24 to 0.62). There was a positive trend in favour of the intervention group for maternal anxiety but not loneliness or use of health services. For ethical reasons, participants identified with clinical depression at 12 weeks were referred for treatment, resulting in no differences between groups at 24 weeks. Of the 221 women in the intervention group who received and evaluated their experience of peer support, over 80% were satisfied and would recommend this support to a friend. Conclusion Telephone based peer support can be effective in preventing postnatal depression among women at high risk. Trial registration ISRCTN68337727. C1 [Dennis, C-L; Hodnett, E.; Kenton, L.; Weston, J.] Univ Toronto, Lawrence S Bloomberg Fac Nursing, Toronto, ON, Canada. [Dennis, C-L; Stewart, D. E.] Univ Toronto, Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada. [Zupancic, J.] Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr, Boston, MA 02215 USA. [Kiss, A.] Sunnybrook Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Res Design & Biostat, Toronto, ON M4N 3M5, Canada. C3 University of Toronto; University of Toronto; Harvard University; Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; University of Toronto; Sunnybrook Health Science Center; Sunnybrook Research Institute RP Dennis, CL (corresponding author), Univ Toronto, Lawrence S Bloomberg Fac Nursing, Toronto, ON, Canada. EM cindylee.dennis@utoronto.ca RI Dennis, Cindy-Lee/ABA-2860-2020; Stewart, Donna Eileen E/J-2844-2016; Zupancic, John/G-2009-2018 OI Dennis, Cindy-Lee/0000-0002-0135-7242; Stewart, Donna Eileen E/0000-0002-8157-7746; Zupancic, John/0000-0003-1734-7193 FU Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MCT 66874] FX This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research grant number MCT 66874. This trial was conducted and data analysed with complete independence of the researchers from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. 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WOS:000263193400003 PM 19147637 OA Green Published, hybrid DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Kontos, EZ Emmons, KM Puleo, E Viswanath, K AF Kontos, Emily Z. Emmons, Karen M. Puleo, Elaine Viswanath, K. TI Determinants and beliefs of health information mavens among a lower-socioeconomic position and minority population SO SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE LA English DT Article DE Communication inequalities; Health disparities; Health information mavenism ID PEER LEADERS; MARKET MAVEN; COMMUNICATION; DISPARITIES; DIRECTIONS; DIFFUSION; EDUCATION; ENCLAVES AB People of lower-socioeconomic position (SEP) and most racial/ethnic minorities face significant communication challenges which may negatively impact their health. Previous research has shown that these groups rely heavily on interpersonal sources to share and receive health information; however, little is known about these lay sources. The purpose of this paper is to apply the concept of a market maven to the public health sector with the aims of identifying determinants of high health information mavenism among low-SEP and racial/ethnic minority groups and to assess the information they may be sharing based on their own health beliefs. Data for this study were drawn from the baseline survey (n = 325) of a US randomized control intervention study aimed at eliciting an understanding of Internet-related challenges among lower-SEP and minority individuals. Regression models were estimated to distinguish significant determinants of health information mavenism among the sample. Similarly, bivariate and logistic multivariable models were estimated to determine the association between health information mavenism and accurate health beliefs relating to diet, physical activity and smoking. The data illustrate that having a larger social network, being female and being older were important factors associated with higher mavenism scores. Additionally being a moderate consumer of general media as well as fewer years in the US and lower language acculturation were significant predictors of higher mavenism scores. Mavens were more likely than non-mavens to maintain accurate beliefs regarding diet; however, there was no distinction between physical activity and smoking beliefs between mavens and non-mavens. These results offer a unique understanding of health information mavenism which could better leverage word-of-mouth health communication efforts among lower-SEP and minority groups in order to reduce communication inequalities. Moreover, the data indicate that health information mavens may serve as an ideal point of intervention in attempts to modify health beliefs with the goal of reducing health disparities among these populations. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. C1 [Kontos, Emily Z.; Emmons, Karen M.; Viswanath, K.] Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dana Farber Canc Inst, Dept Soc Human Dev & Hlth, Boston, MA 02215 USA. [Puleo, Elaine] Univ Massachusetts, Amherst Sch Publ Hlth & Hlth Sci, Amherst, MA 01003 USA. C3 Harvard University; Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Amherst RP Kontos, EZ (corresponding author), Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dana Farber Canc Inst, Dept Soc Human Dev & Hlth, 401 Pk Dr,Room 403F, Boston, MA 02215 USA. EM ekontos@hsph.harvard.edu FU US National Cancer Institute [5R01CA122894]; Harvard Education Program in Cancer Prevention and Control [5R25CA057711] FX This study was made possible with funding from the US National Cancer Institute through the following mechanisms: "Click to Connect: Improving Health Literacy through Computer Literacy", grant #5R01CA122894, and the Harvard Education Program in Cancer Prevention and Control, grant #5R25CA057711. 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Sci. Med. PD JUL PY 2011 VL 73 IS 1 BP 22 EP 32 DI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.04.024 PG 11 WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Social Sciences, Biomedical WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Biomedical Social Sciences GA 799DK UT WOS:000293263500004 PM 21683493 OA Green Accepted DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Garcia, DO Valdez, LA Aceves, B Bell, ML Rabe, BA Villavicencio, EA Marrero, DG Melton, F Hooker, SP AF Garcia, David O. Valdez, Luis A. Aceves, Benjamin Bell, Melanie L. Rabe, Brooke A. Villavicencio, Edgar A. Marrero, David G. Melton, Forest Hooker, Steven P. TI mHealth-Supported Gender- and Culturally Sensitive Weight Loss Intervention for Hispanic Men With Overweight and Obesity: Single-Arm Pilot Study SO JMIR FORMATIVE RESEARCH LA English DT Article DE Hispanic; mobile health; mHealth; overweight; obesity; weight loss ID BEHAVIOR-CHANGE TECHNIQUES; HEALTH BEHAVIORS; LOSS PROGRAM; ACCULTURATION; PERSPECTIVES; SATISFACTION; METAANALYSIS; TECHNOLOGY; OUTCOMES; ADULTS AB Background: Hispanic men have disproportionate rates of overweight and obesity compared with other racial and ethnic subpopulations. However, few weight loss interventions have been developed specifically for this high-risk group. Furthermore, the use of mobile health (mHealth) technologies to support lifestyle behavior changes in weight loss interventions for Hispanic men is largely untested. Objective: This single-arm pilot study examined the feasibility and acceptability of integrating mHealth technology into a 12-week gender- and culturally sensitive weight loss intervention (GCSWLI) for Hispanic men with overweight and obesity. Methods: A total of 18 Hispanic men (mean age 38, SD 10.9 years; mean BMI 34.3, SD 5.5 kg/m(2); 10/18, 56% Spanish monolingual) received a GCSWLI, including weekly in-person individual sessions, a daily calorie goal, and prescription of >= 225 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week. mHealth technology support included tailored SMS text messaging, behavior self-monitoring support using Fitbit Charge 2, and weight tracking using a Fitbit Aria Wi-Fi Smart Scale. Changes in weight from baseline to 12 weeks were estimated using a paired 2-tailed t test. Descriptive analyses characterized the use of Fitbit and smart scales. Semistructured interviews were conducted immediately after intervention to assess the participants' weight loss experiences and perspectives on mHealth technologies. Results: Of 18 participants, 16 (89%) completed the 12-week assessments; the overall attrition rate was 11.1%. The mean weight loss at week 12 was -4.7 kg (95% CI 7.1 to -2.4 kg; P<.001). Participants wore the Fitbit 71.58% (962/1344) of the intervention days and logged their body weight using the smart scale (410/1344, 30.51% of the intervention days). Participants identified barriers to the use of the technology, such as lack of technological literacy and unreliable internet access for the smart scale. Conclusions: Although clinically significant weight loss was achieved by integrating mHealth technology into the GCSWLI, adherence to the prescribed use of technology was modest. Addressing barriers to the use of such technologies identified in our work may help to refine an mHealth intervention approach for Hispanic men. C1 [Garcia, David O.; Villavicencio, Edgar A.; Marrero, David G.] Univ Arizona, Mel & Enid Zuckerman Coll Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Promot Sci, 3950 S Country Club,Suite 330, Tucson, AZ 85714 USA. [Valdez, Luis A.] Drexel Univ, Dornsife Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Community Hlth & Prevent, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA. [Aceves, Benjamin] San Diego State Univ, Coll Hlth & Human Serv, Sch Publ Hlth, San Diego, CA 92182 USA. [Bell, Melanie L.; Rabe, Brooke A.] Univ Arizona, Mel & Enid Zuckerman Coll Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Tucson, AZ 85714 USA. [Melton, Forest] Univ Arizona, Coll Med, Dept Clin & Translat Sci, Tucson, AZ 85714 USA. [Hooker, Steven P.] San Diego State Univ, Coll Hlth & Human Serv, San Diego, CA 92182 USA. C3 University of Arizona; Drexel University; California State University System; San Diego State University; University of Arizona; University of Arizona; California State University System; San Diego State University RP Garcia, DO (corresponding author), Univ Arizona, Mel & Enid Zuckerman Coll Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Promot Sci, 3950 S Country Club,Suite 330, Tucson, AZ 85714 USA. EM davidogarcia@arizona.edu RI ; Bell, Melanie/D-1839-2011 OI Villavicencio, Edgar A/0000-0002-5982-099X; Aceves, Benjamin/0000-0003-1683-5195; Bell, Melanie/0000-0003-4821-4094; Melton, Forest L./0000-0002-8616-5855; Garcia, David/0000-0001-6669-9457; Marrero, David/0000-0003-2112-7812 FU University of Arizona Cancer Center Disparities Pilot Project Award; University of Arizona Foundation; Center for Prevention and Health Promotion Fund FX This work was supported by the University of Arizona Cancer Center Disparities Pilot Project Award, the University of Arizona Foundation, and Dean's Canyon Rach Center for Prevention and Health Promotion Fund. 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PD SEP PY 2022 VL 6 IS 9 AR e37637 DI 10.2196/37637 PG 13 WC Health Care Sciences & Services; Medical Informatics WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Health Care Sciences & Services; Medical Informatics GA 7J4EC UT WOS:000904532900035 PM 36129735 OA gold, Green Published DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Zikargae, MH AF Zikargae, Mekonnen Hailemariam TI Risk communication, ethics and academic integrity in the process of minimizing the impacts of the covid-19 crisis in Ethiopian higher education SO COGENT EDUCATION LA English DT Article DE Ethiopia; higher educations; ethics; risk communication; COVID-19; academic integrity; task force ID CHRONIC DISEASE PATIENTS; HEALTH-CARE PROVIDERS; ADDIS-ABABA; PREVENTIVE MEASURES; SOUTHERN ETHIOPIA; CORONA VIRUS; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDE; ZONE; PREPAREDNESS AB This study aimed to analyze the commitment, preparedness, response, and challenges of risk communication for the prevention, ethics, and academic integrity of COVID-19 in Ethiopian higher education. Higher education is among those sectors seriously affected by the pandemic and associated factors. Since it appeared in the country, various ethical risk responses have been employed to minimize its impacts. Every commitment, response, preparedness, ethics, academic integrity, and risk communication are efforts to curve the impacts that transcend the globe. The study used an institutional-based cross-sectional study design. Data were collected from primary and secondary sources. These were extracted using web-based research from academic research, preparedness, protocols, standards, and risk communication working papers that were prepared for the Ethiopian context and university media sources. Therefore, a web-based search was used to gather information on the preparedness, commitments, performances, and challenges of Ethiopian higher education. Qualitative thematic analysis was used to explore the experiences of Ethiopian higher education. The findings show that higher education is one of the main task forces that support the national response scheme against the pandemic. The government makes an enormous effort to reduce and minimize its impacts. The findings show that higher education as a task force has contributed strongly to national efforts based on research, ethics, academic integrity, humanitarian assistance, online meetings, e-learning, and conferences. Although research focused on knowledge, attitude, and practice to date there has been no clinical research. Research conducted on COVID-19 by academicians (374 academic staff) of 26 universities focuses on KAPs. Besides, e-learning was poorly and unethically managed to support disrupted education. The postgraduate program was facilitated outside of campus through e-learning which eroded academic integrity. However, e-learning is the weakest and unethical way to support undergraduate and even partially postgraduate programs. The Internet infrastructure and the acculturation of student e-learning are problematic. Furthermore, external pressures such as ethnic conflicts, wars, and fragile political situations are causing the reopening to be delayed. In Ethiopian higher education, the overall effort to communicate risks, ethical education, and academic integrity is minimal. It lacks continuity. It lacks academic integrity. Thus, academic ethics is eroded. The challenges are the remaining homework of the universities. I suggest that risk communication, ethical and research-based solutions need to be re-evaluated and re-considered. C1 [Zikargae, Mekonnen Hailemariam] Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia. C3 Bahir Dar University RP Zikargae, MH (corresponding author), Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia. 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PD DEC 31 PY 2022 VL 9 IS 1 AR 2062892 DI 10.1080/2331186X.2022.2062892 PG 17 WC Education & Educational Research WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI) SC Education & Educational Research GA 0L6PA UT WOS:000781593400001 OA gold DA 2023-08-24 ER PT J AU Holden, ACL AF Holden, Alexander C. L. TI Cosmetic dentistry: A socioethical evaluation SO BIOETHICS LA English DT Article DE cosmetic; dentistry; ethics; professionalism; sociology ID SURGERY AB Biomedically, the mouth is often described as a "window on the body"; many systemic health issues may manifest in the oral cavity. The metaphor of a "window" also holds true for the sociological impact of the mouth; judgements and assumptions about social status and affluence may often be made based on dental appearance. The mouth may be used by society to determine the value a person is perceived to place on self-care. Those who are afflicted with dental disease, and therefore have poor dental appearance, are often assumed to be neglectful. Given the importance that is placed upon the appearance of the mouth, it is no surprise that cosmetic dentistry has developed as a service offered by the profession, with novel treatments becoming popular as a way of changing dental appearance. The development of cosmetic medicine has enjoyed wide discussion within the sociological literature. Whilst dentistry has undeniably evolved from medicine, and therefore shares many parallels concerning ethical and social considerations, dentistry differs fundamentally in its organisation, the nature of the conditions most commonly managed and the expectations of patients seeking care. This article investigates the socioethical issues specifically raised by cosmetic dentistry. The dental profession's scope as the protectors and restorers of the oral cavity from the effects of dental disease has now expanded to include the treatment of the flawed smile. Some within the dental profession advocate for commentary on dental appearance to be made to patients as routine practice, accompanied by associated recommendations for possible treatments to rectify perceived deficiencies. The place of cosmetic dentistry as a legitimate professional pursuit has not been explored widely. Comprehensive explorations come from Welie, who analyses both the professional and moral status of cosmetic intervention within the sphere of medicine and dentistry, and from Ozar and Sokol, who consider the place of aesthetic values in relation to other central values in the profession. This article examines closely how cosmetic dentistry is classified and the consequences of this upon the position of cosmetic dentistry as discipline. The inclusion of dentistry in the discussion of the position of cosmetic procedures within medicine is fraught. Whilst the origins of dentistry are from medicine, the nature of dentistry has become somewhat different from its progenitor; the consequences of this in relation to the classification of cosmetic dentistry cannot be overlooked. Within this study of cosmetic dentistry, the reader will note the use of both "patient" and "consumer" as terms to describe those who may seek the services of healthcare professionals. It is noticeable within modern society that many who would have once considered themselves to be patients, now place themselves in the role of consumers, and would describe themselves as such. To place an immediate value upon this as a negative sign of the increased influence of commercial pressures within healthcare would be unreasonable. To be described as a consumer, confers the assumption of a set of rights relating to how one must be treated. Consumers are powerful; emphasis is placed upon their ability to "vote with their feet" and thusly control the quality of service that they receive. Increased choice and freedom to exercise this are also hallmarks of the modern consumer of health services. Whilst contemporary discourses upon the role and status of the patient state largely the same, the descriptor would seem only to be held dear to the health professions and those who study them. There is also a potential negative aspect to the introduction of the healthcare consumer; one where the overarching professional duties to do no harm and to engage in the exercise of informed consent seem less important. Here, respecting the ultimate authority of the health consumer to dictate the service that they would like to receive is viewed by many professionals to be equivalent to patient primacy. Where those who seek care are described in this study as being consumers, it is a reference to the status of those seeking treatment as being empowered, and equal to those who provide treatment. It is also an acknowledgement of the rights of care-seekers to be treated as ends in themselves, rather than as means to ends. Where the negative aspects of consumerism in healthcare are encountered, these will be explicitly addressed. This article will have three main areas of discussion. Firstly, the common assertion that cosmetic dentistry is separate from the rest of dentistry, as is often claimed of cosmetic surgery and medicine, will be explored and challenged. In doing this, Foucault's concept of "care of the self" will be used to understand a possible framework where cosmetic dentistry may become a legitimate part of healthcare; the pursuit of self-improvement being an integral aspect of well-being. Secondly, the relationship between cosmetic dentistry and commercialisation of healthcare will be examined. How cosmetic dentistry may be portrayed and "sold" to patients, and the tensions that this may lead to in relation to notions of professionalism. This is an important branch in the narrative surrounding cosmetic dentistry but raises questions that are relevant to professional ethics rather than definitions of cosmetic improvement in the oral cavity. Lastly, another concept described by Foucault will be applied to cosmetic dentistry. The idea of the "dental gaze" suggests that the cosmetic enhancements offered by the dental profession offer a socially mediated control on the concept of the ideal smile. The way that this is often enforced through professional discipline will be explored and critiqued. This study will examine the extent to which criticisms of the professional status of cosmetic dentistry still apply to contempory practice. Foucault outlined his theory of care of the self in the second and third volumes of the History of Sexuality. This idea of ethics examined practices that an individual might engage in, so as to transform their own mode of being. An important aspect of this ethics is the challenge to the established pursuit of the "hermeneutics of the subject," with Foucault placing emphasis upon the care of the self, rather than self-knowledge. Foucault analysed Ancient Greek and Roman texts, developing ideas of how individuals might form themselves as ethical subjects, enabling transformation. The Ancient Greeks took this as how one might live well, whilst under the Romans, this evolved to be concerned with developing the "good-self." He stated the practices facilitating this development to be; "the procedures, which no doubt exist in every civilisation, offered or prescribed to individuals in order to determine their identity, maintain it, transform it in terms of a certain number of ends. " Care of the self is characterised by a continual process of self-improvement that may be achieved by many processes, including; self-reflection, self-examination, self-decipherment and self-transformation. Foucault does not pose care of the self to be an obligative duty; it is instead positioned as an ethics that encourages active freedom to engage in processes of cultivation of the self. The concept of care of the self would appear to have implications for cosmetic treatments as acts within the process of self-cultivation. Cosmetic enhancement could be positioned to be an act of self-improvement in line with care of the self; Foucault termed them to be, "technologies of the self." If through introspection, an individual becomes aware of a perceived deficit in their appearance that negatively impacts upon their confidence and self-esteem, having this addressed through cosmetic intervention would be a positive ethical act. Through the ethics of care of the self, we see the normalisation of cosmetic treatment and the removal of the stigma of vanity, and the concept of self-improvement being incorporated within the wider definition of health. Through this, cosmetic intervention may be seen as; "a primary mode for articulating the authentic, healthy and happy self." Cosmetic interventions provided by healthcare practitioners cause definitional difficulty. It is traditionally a point of dispute as to whether cosmetic surgery forms a legitimate aspect of healthcare practice. Proponents of medical professionalism have suggested that the social contract existent between the health professions and society places the purpose of medicine to be the treatment of disease and alleviation of suffering. Cosmetic interventions are specifically excluded from this concept of medical purpose, due to their nature as non-therapeutic procedures within strict definitions of health. Because of this lack of legitimacy in line with the given parameters of medicine, historically, cosmetic surgery has been considered by early physicians; "to be minor, without healing purpose, and relegated to lay-practitioners." Many surgeons would also refuse to perform cosmetic surgery, terming it "beauty surgery." More difficult than addressing whether cosmetic surgery is a legitimate part of medicine, is addressing the question of how cosmetic dentistry integrates with the rest of the pursuits of the dental profession. Oral Health is defined by the WHO to be; "essential to general health and quality of life. It is a state of being free from mouth and facial pain, oral and throat cancer, oral infection and sores, periodontal (gum) disease, tooth decay, tooth loss, and other diseases and disorders that limit an individual's capacity in biting, chewing, smiling, speaking, and psychosocial wellbeing." Whilst undoubtedly biomedical in focus, the definition does reference the capacity to smile and the effects of deficiencies in this ability upon psychosocial wellbeing to be firmly part of oral health. Concepts of this strong association between psycho-social and traditional biomedical factors, are made clearer by The World Dental Federation (FDI), who define oral health as; "multi-faceted and includes the ability to speak, smile, smell, taste, touch, chew, swallow and convey a range of emotions through facial expressions with confidence and without pain, discomfort and disease of the craniofacial complex. " This definition again references smiling and includes the concept that being able to do so with confidence to be an integral part of oral health. Ozar and Sokol recognise the importance of aesthetic values within dental practice. They acknowledge that dental professionals who paid no attention to aesthetic values would be failing professionally, both from the perspectives of their professional peers, and from the public utilising their services. Because of this, they place aesthetics as a core tenent of the profession's values. Despite this recognition, within their ranking of core values, aesthetics is separated from consideration as part of oral health, which is placed as a higher value than aesthetics. Some have advocated that, as with medicine, a strict demarcation exists in the professional status between dentistry carried out for therapeutic reasons and that which is carried out for cosmetic purposes. Welie states that; "ugliness is not a medical indication; it does not necessitate medical treatment in the same way that a toothache, gingivitis or oral cancer does." He also states that the professional status of dentistry is lost when dentists focus their practices upon the provision of purely aesthetic interventions. The issue of what constitutes a cosmetic or a medical issue is dealt with by Welie by distinguishing between conditions which are healing and those that are enhancing. He uses two examples of similar conditions which both affect dental appearance; firstly, that of cleft-lip and palate, and secondly, the crowding and misalignment of teeth in malocclusion. Welie suggests the term "integrity" as a synonym for health. He questions whether the aesthetic considerations of repairing a cleft-lip and palate is any more medically justified than that orthodontic treatment. He states that integrity is not violated by having an ugly appearance and that whilst aesthetic considerations and side-effects are important; they are not within the realms of medical consideration. Therefore, aside from fixing any functional deformity, both procedures fail to count as being medical procedures if carried out solely on the basis of dental appearance. Welie places culture as the main determination as to why perceived defects in dental appearance are considered to violate integrity; it is social environment that determines attractiveness. He questions whether the improvement of a person's appearance restores integrity, thus making it a bona fide medical intervention, or whether it is an enhancement because ugliness is not a contraindication to integrity. It is of note that Welie does not recognise any differences between the fundamental purposes of medical and dental practice; classing both to have equal foundations within the tradition of treating pathology and pain only. The heavy burden of justification upon cosmetic dentistry is derived from its subjective nature. Orthodontics in not questioned in the same way, despite relying upon the same subjective reasoning for providing treatment. Certainly, by the categorisations of Welie, orthodontics is undoubtedly non-medical in nature, unless aesthetics is not the primary reason for treatment. The intrinsic difference that would seem to exist in other areas of cosmetics and general health is the idea that in cosmetic interventions, the objective is to make the patient more, or better than, well rather than to restore health. Again, in dentistry this point of differentiation struggles to find legitimacy, especially so if the ethics of self-care are considered. Rose stated; "The old lines between treatment, correction, and enhancement can no longer be sustained." The apparent lack of distinction between general dentists and "cosmetic dentists" is also testament to the close alignment between cosmetic dentistry and professional activities that treat oral disease. The Health Care Complaints Commission in NSW, Australia stated that; "A central characteristic of cosmetic surgery is that it is initiated by the consumer to improve their appearance and self-esteem." Cosmetic dentistry (and the whole cosmetic discipline) is patient driven, which places cosmetic dentistry in line with ideals of bioethics and consumer culture, where those seeking treatment are empowered. If the traditional purpose of dentistry is expanded to accept the practice of cosmetic dentistry, this new goal of beauty as a good available to consumers, aligns with the reduction of power and authority held by clinicians and with the desire to enhance patient autonomy. Exley suggests that cosmetic dentistry may continue to develop as a normalised aspect of self-care, in the same manner as toothbrushing has become an integral part of most home-healthcare regimes. In this comparison, Exley quotes Davis, who suggests that the rise in the use of toothpastes was, "a social trend greatly aided by the efforts of commercial interests." The social demand to have an aesthetically pleasing smile has also driven the popularity of tooth-brushing. The introduction of active whitening ingredients into many toothpastes, reinforces Exley's comparison and suggests that the social acceptability of dental cosmetic enhancement is likely to sustain its growth in popularity, becoming accepted as part of everyday routine. The triptych of absence that determines the nature of a procedure to be cosmetic is; firstly, the absence of a patient, instead a consumer seeks and initiates treatment; secondly, the absence of pathology and; thirdly, the absence of a therapeutic purpose. Originally, cosmetic surgery was justified through being claimed to act as a psychiatric intervention. As improvements to confidence and self-esteem began to be seen by society as legitimate justifications to cosmetic intervention, much virtue is derived from the desire of the public to seek such treatment. The desire to create improvement of appearance and development of both self-esteem and confidence are ubiquitous within all dental treatments. Given this universality, as well as the empowerment of all patients as health consumers, it is difficult to really distinguish between many cosmetic and traditionally therapeutic treatments in dentistry. Further evidence towards the concept of there being little difference between cosmetic, and the rest of dentistry, is the existence of the idea of aesthetic failure which is a routine consideration in dental practice. Aesthetic failure occurs when a restoration remains structurally and functionally sound but loses its aesthetic properties. This, for many (including those who may think dimly of cosmetic treatments), is justification enough for removal and replacement. Aesthetics is a primary consideration for the majority of dental procedures, often being the only consideration for many patients. This in a stark contrast to medicine, where aesthetics often becomes a secondary consideration; for example, an unsightly scar is perhaps a small price to pay for a successful, life-sustaining surgery. References to the mental health of those seeking cosmetic treatments are made by the Medical Board of Australia and General Medical Council (UK) in their regulatory guidance. Medical practitioners providing cosmetic treatments are obliged to consider the need for independent psychological assessment. There is no equivalent guidance from the Dental Board of Australia or the General Dental Council (UK). This absence may indicate a more relaxed attitude within society towards dental enhancement, that to require practitioners to refer when concurrent psychological morbidity presents would be unrealistic and ultimately irrelevant in the majority of cases. However, a more relaxed position does not mean there is any less requirement for awareness of patients seeking cosmetic dentistry who may be suffering with body dysmorphic disorder. Treatment of these individuals with cosmetic dentistry, without addressing any underlying psychological pathology, would not contribute to the increasing of well-being and human flourishing. Therefore, the essential element that the ethics of care of the self would require to qualify an intervention as ethical is missing, rendering the treatment unjustifiable through this theoretical framework. In summary, cosmetic dentistry would seem to be included within the definition of professional dentistry. To exclude it on the belief that improvements in self-esteem and confidence are trivial and non-bona fide justifications deny the widened definition of oral health given by both the WHO and the FDI. It would also serve to excise a large portion of the dental profession, the main role of which is to provide treatments which primarily improve dental appearance. The dental professional goals of yesteryear may have been firmly fixed upon alleviation of suffering. However, in the 21st Century it seems somehow denialist to suggest that the improvement of confidence and self-esteem is not part of the professional purpose of the dental profession. Data pertaining to cosmetic dentistry is scant, the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry (AACD) reported that 86% of patients seen by their surveyed members reported that their main reason for seeking cosmetic dental treatment was an improvement in self-esteem. It is of note that the next greatest reason (at 51%) was the correction of previously failed cosmetic treatment. The Academy does not elaborate upon what is defined to be a failure; this could be structural failure or aesthetic failure, where the cosmetic expectations of patients are not met, either immediately or sometime after the procedure. It is difficult to reconcile ideas of cosmetic treatment as an ethical methodology of care of the self, with the image on the front cover of the AACD report. The picture is of a mouth being examined with a common dental mirror. In the mirror, it isn't the patient (or consumer) who is reflected; but the face of George Washington, taken from the US one-dollar bill. It is this overt reference to the financial reward of cosmetic dentistry, that leads to concerns about the relationship between cosmetic dentistry, ethics and professional culture. The semiotics of this image would suggest that it is not the needs of the patient that are reflected in the practice of cosmetic dentistry. Instead, the image suggests it is profit and personal reward that is the driving-force in providing these services. Cosmetic dentistry and surgery is often justified by reference to consumer culture and psychological well-being. The narrative of consumer rights and psychological imperatives within cosmetic disciplines is dominant, with procedures being justified purely on the basis that patients have demanded them. Whilst respect for the patient as an autonomous being is the key-stone of any patient-clinician relationship, the idea of the truly equal clinical interaction is a myth. There is commonly a disparity in knowledge between patient and clinician regarding dental treatment. There is a problem with valid consent if it is not used to promote the freedom of a patient through attempts to reduce this informational inequality. For example, we may fully accept a patient's right to seek a cosmetic dental treatment, however, many of these are highly destructive and are likely to carry with them serious repercussions for future oral health and treatment need. For a patient to make a truly free choice, they need to be made aware of this. This is where the "new" paradigm of the patient as a consumer struggles; the professional nature of dentistry requires for the patient to be told of this risk and possible alternatives. The provision of treatment as a commercial good on the presumption that the patient pays their money and takes their choice (or chance), pushes dentistry away from its professional obligation of effacement of self-interest and patient primacy. This tension reveals the issues of viewing cosmetic dentistry to be a consumer-product rather than a bona fide therapeutic intervention, carried out as a full part of the professional purpose. When taken as a consumer product, the emphasis of treatment becomes one of an indulgence; a consumer luxury where the consumer expects their rights of autonomy to be absolute. Here we see the evolution of the dental surgery into the "dental spa," with the world of the beauty industry and clinician colliding. This paradigm leaves little room for the therapeutic alliance; where the skill of the clinician is utilised within a framework of professional (rather than consumer) duty and expectation. The view of the patient as an empowered consumer is to be encouraged, but only in so far as the professional status and associated obligations that accompany this are preserved. The spa-model of dental practice finds procedures to be marketed as "pamper products." Botox, lip-fillers and teeth whitening have seen a surge in popularity within the dental armamentarium. This is despite many regulators of the dental professions worldwide stating almost universally that cosmetic injectables have limited place in the practice of dentistry. The rise in the portrayal of cosmetic dentistry as being a luxurious and pleasurable experience links with the concept that self-improvement through enhancement is fun and exciting. Dental tourism, like its counterpart in the medical industry, is perhaps the ultimate demonstration of this combination between pleasure and cosmetic enhancement. Within medicine, clinicians often argue that "medical spas" are in fact clinics, with preference for the use of medicalised terminology to describe the premises and procedures. This is in contrast to many dental surgeries that focus upon cosmetic treatments in preference to other forms of traditional dentistry, where practitioners seek to distance themselves from the perceived discomfort of conventional dental procedures. The initiation of many treatments within dental practice is patient-driven, but the treatments are not necessarily cosmetic in nature. The rise of insurance to cover the costs of oral health needs has contributed to dentistry be more consumer-focused. Patients may attend for a professional clean, with little therapeutic need, in part because they feel it is owed to them for having paid for insurance. This is a phenomenon that has no equivalent in medicine; those with private medical insurance would be unlikely to seek a medical consultation and treatment, simply because they felt that they had paid for it through insurance. The focus upon getting patients into the chair has led to many dentists offering free consultations. Bishop quotes Dr Harlan Pollock, a plastic surgeon, who is critical of such offers, stating; "Free consultations are a gimmick that are used in obtaining patients and they're worth about what they cost horizontal ellipsis They are an opportunity to sell an operation and serve very little purpose." Many cosmetic treatments, such as veneers, teeth whitening and facial injectables, are both the instruments for obtaining a desired effect, and the effect in themselves. The unnatural, bright, white and perfectly aligned smile or swollen and puckered lips are overt status symbols in their own rights and sought after by many for that reason. Franks gives three parameters to consumerism; 1) the pleasure of spending money and conspicuous consumerism; 2) relentlessness and transience, whereby enough is never enough and; 3) the individualisation of the bases and morality of action. In the context of cosmetic dentistry, this may lead to consumers seeking whiter, brighter and more accentuated dental appearances. Leiss articulates this as the practice where; "(T)he needs of self-esteem and self-actualization are expressed and pursued through the purchase of commodities." The push for ever brighter teeth can be seen within the instruments of the dentist. At one time, the "A1" shade was the brightest that was achievable; composite filling materials, porcelain shades and artificial teeth for dentures were made to conform to this scale. This is no longer the case; the popularity of procedures such as tooth whitening have led to the development of brighter shades. Dentists report that for many, the old maximum of A1 has become inadequate. The perceived neo-liberal entitlement to spend resources as an individual deems fit, is an element which society is oriented to defend and preserve. Where cosmetic dentistry is particularly challenging is where patients develop unrealistic expectations, through advertising or direct clinician salesmanship. Where this happens, the development of perceived needs which do not exist, or real needs that are addressed with irrelevant objects, may lead patients to have treatment that is inappropriate. This is where dental practitioners have a need to be robust in the way that they discuss treatments and expectations with patients. Advertising, whilst having the potential to be manipulative, cannot be said to always create false needs. It is easy in this circumstance to use this criticism of consumerism to negate the possibility of cosmetic dentistry being provided justifiably. Leiss states that needs and objects define one another, that ultimately, both real and manipulated needs are underpinned by individual values. The judgement of clinicians, who might feel that the perceived cosmetic defect does not warrant the intervention, asserts one aesthetic ideal over another. The act of refusing to provide treatment on this basis, rather than on a basis of judgement on clinical appropriateness, valorises the clinician's view of what is aesthetic. Patients are told that treatment is not possible on the basis that it does not strictly adhere to the normative view of what should be treated. This needs to be accepted as a socially mediated response, that imposes the beliefs of the clinician, onto the patient and judges them based on that schema. Commercialised models of dentistry encourage dental skill to be thought of as a commodity, owned by dental practitioners, available only to those who might be able to pay. As discussed, this contributes to the perception of dentistry to be a luxury good. This applies to all circumstances where dentistry is commodified, not only in consideration of cosmetic practice. In this circumstance, the cost, availability and quality of treatment are determined by open competition between providers, where the self-interest of practice owners and clinicians will bring price and quality into an acceptable balance. In this paradigm, the bioethical principle of justice is replaced by a market-driven model whereby patients may access only that for which they can pay. Welie uses the principle of justice to argue between the separation of medical care and non-medical care. He states that it would be unjust for a society not to offer equal access to dental hygiene, but that it would not be considered unjust for society to have unequal access to an intervention such as laser-eye surgery. This is a valid argument in so far as the wearing of eyeglasses is not a point of stigma within society; considering the popularity of non-prescription eyewear, this is reasonably obvious. However, Welie does not compare like with like. It can be reasonably well established that dental appearance has significant influence over how an individual is perceived in society. Moeller et al. noted a considerably higher public awareness of an association between social deprivation and poor oral health in comparison to other health conditions such as cancer, diabetes and depression. This is believed to lead to greater possibility of association between dental appearance and assumptions being made about socioeconomic status, with the potential for discrimination on this basis. Bedos et al. found that those receiving social assistance, who are disproportionately afflicted with poor oral health and associated poor dental aesthetics, place great value upon the appearance of their teeth. The participants complained about decline in dental appearance and the associated, negative impacts this had upon their self-esteem, social interactions and whether they could secure gainful employment. Reports of hopelessness relating to this situation lead to a preference in extractions and opting for complete dentures. This is supported by Khalid and Quinonez, who state that those without conformity to the expectation of dental appearance celebrated and enjoyed by the social elite, are assigned negative personality and character traits. Whilst Welie might be justified in describing a lack of outrage relating to unequal access to non-medical interventions, the concept of "cosmetic justice" in relation to dentistry holds merit given the huge impacts that effect those who suffer a decline in dental aesthetics. Despite this, the NHS in the United Kingdom states that; "NHS dental treatment does not include cosmetic treatments that are not clinically necessary horizontal ellipsis Cosmetic treatments horizontal ellipsis are used to improve the appearance of your teeth and make them look more attractive, and are only available privately." Whilst the boundaries of a public health system need to be realistic, an artificial demarcation between cosmetic and therapeutic treatments assumes that the differentiation between these two categories within dentistry is obvious, if it exists at all. To remain with the example of the NHS, cosmetic operations such as the provision of breast implants have been carried out on the justification of improving mental wellbeing and human flourishing. In would seem incongruous for cosmetic dental treatment to be treated differently. The reality of the situation is that often the demarcation between cosmetic and traditional treatment becomes indistinguishable; providing a patient with a set of dentures to enable them to chew or provision of a crown to aid structural integrity may also have the simultaneous effect of enhancing appearance. One imagines that few dental professionals would argue that the cosmetic improvement was merely a by-product of restoring function. This again shows that the separation of oral health and aesthetics is indeed artificial and that the two concepts are frequently intertwined to the point of being inseparable. In this way, where public dental services are provided, whilst policy directions may state that cosmetic treatment is not available, this is not a position that is practically enforceable; only purely cosmetic procedures are able to be realistically excluded. Whilst cosmetic dentistry is not in itself damaging to professional ethics and professionalism, if undertaken in a manner that is consumer-driven, converted into a commodity, it has the potential, as well as the rest of dentistry and medicine, to radically change the dynamics of the social contract. Commercial strategies such as advertising typically walk a fine line between scaring patients, through directing attention towards possible deficits, and offering pleasure or satisfaction. Advertising has the potential to damage patient autonomy when used in a manner that is manipulative and this practice should be universally regulated and condemned. Dental appearance is a fundamental factor in how individuals are perceived and judged by society. The dismissal of cosmetic dentistry as part of the legitimate practice of dentistry is illogical; the separation should instead be between cosmetic dentistry and commercialism. The tradition of surveillance in dentistry is long established. Nettleton describes the dentist as a "tooth-judge," stating; "The duty of the dentist was not just to invade the mouth but to monitor and regulate and thus to contribute to the policing of bodies." The preventative focus of dentistry is testament to the profession's role in observing and measuring the mouth. Nettleton's description of the dentist-as-judge places the dental professional in a position to exercise disciplinary power. Foucaldian accounts of power allow description of three instruments through which a dental professional may exercise disciplinary power; firstly, through hierarchical observation; secondly by utilising normalising judgement; and thirdly, combining the first two instruments in the process of the clinical examination. Through the process of hierarchical observation, subjects are placed into a state of perceived continuous surveillance, regardless of whether this surveillance is continuously in operation. Normalising judgement involves the evaluation and comparison of individual patients to established norms. This allows the dentist to declare patients to be either "normal" or "abnormal" and conformity assured through correction. The examination is the result of the combination of hierarchical observation and normalising judgement. This instrument permits, "the subjection of those who are perceived as objects and the objectification of those who are subjected horizontal ellipsis in this slender technique are to be found a whole domain of knowledge, a whole type of power." Through the dental examination, each mouth could be scrutinised and if deviation from the norm detected, this can be corrected. The power of the dentist has traditionally been used to assert conformity to norms of absence of disease, for example, through the filling of carious teeth, or in the instruction of the proper manner to maintain a plaque free mouth. In the modern era, dentists have expanded their powers of disciplinary observation and the normalising gaze, through social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter. Advertising pages for dental practices on social media frequently use advertising to remind patients to maintain proper oral hygiene and attend regularly. This also extends to how teeth are depicted, and cosmetic procedures represented. The ideals and beliefs of the dental profession of the ideal mouth may be enforced through the normalising gaze, whereby patients may be subjected to the professionally-held norm of a well-aligned, white smile, in a mouth with lips of ideal proportion. The dental professional does not have to explicitly subject the patient to this norm; the patient is bombarded with messages within the practice environment, through promotional and educational materials. It would be wrong, as Khalid and Quinonez note well, to suggest that the dental profession is solely responsible for the setting of societal norms relating to what constitutes the ideal smile. It would be more appropriate to describe the dental profession as being an enabling factor to society's desire for a mouth that looks a certain way. The profession's disciplinary authority and expertise of what can be achieved, drives the notion of what a disciplined smile may be. It is through schools of professional theory that dentists are trained to exercise their powers of hierarchical observation. The establishment of the dental profession in the early 20th Century led to the legitimisation of the dentist as an authority in enforcing the norms of the ideal smile that are ultimately informed by society. The power of the profession comes from the stigma of poor oral health; "They conform to norms not because they are afraid of the power itself, but because of the possibility of facing penalty, namely, negative stereotyping of individuals with 'bad' teeth." The practices of the dental profession in engaging in exploitative advertising, designed to induce perception of treatment need, and the complicity of professionals in consumption-focused practice (the relentlessness of consumerism) helps to enforced societal norms. Otto illustrates this well in telling the story of Mame Adjei, the winner of Miss Maryland in 2015. As part of her competition prize, she is awarded ten thousand dollars towards treatment at one of the award's sponsors; a cosmetic dentist. She tells of how Adjei sits in the dentist's waiting room, bombarded with images of other beauty pageant winners who have received treatment and professional messages such as; "Like they say with the lottery, you gotta be in it to win it. You have to play the game. Life is hard enough and a bright, beautiful smile can help open doors and hearts." Following her consultation, Adjei reports feeling more aware and critical of her teeth and decides to embark upon the treatment recommended to her. After this, Otto describes a person in conflict; Adjei has had the treatment she perceived she needed to progress in the pageant world but is also disturbed by the process; "I'm like an art project horizontal ellipsis I don't think I needed it horizontal ellipsis I don't mind my little special things about me. Now my teeth look like everyone else's." This is a stark example of the "gaze" being applied to ideal norms of aesthetic beauty. The "gaze" of the cosmetic dentist becomes manifest in the use of computerised or conventional technologies that show patients the predicted outcome of treatment. Programmes may alter patient's smiles digitally or through the "diagnostic" wax-model of teeth produced by the dentist to show what might be realised through cosmetic intervention. Here the dentist specifies the parameters of how they will transform the smile. These processes can be likened to the whorls and lines of the cosmetic marker pen in surgical consultations. The specialised training and professional status of dentists, places them in a position of authority. This authority, combined with the culturally derived notions of ideal dental aesthetics, makes it difficult for dental professionals to be neutral participants in changing the appearance of the mouth. The dental profession could be seen to have a vested interest in not challenging prevailing social norms; after all, cosmetic dentistry will always offer dentists an alternative stream of income regardless of any decreasing prevalence of dental disease. It could be argued that the dental profession has a duty to contribute to the destigmatisation of alternative appearances, addressing the paradigm where individuals with facial and other deformity are disabled by the culture around them rather than any physical or functional impairment. Twine notes that there is a tendency to scoff at how foolish society was in the days of yesteryear to place any weight upon the pseudo-science of physiognomy, and yet how prevalent these ideas within society still remain. Through a collective addressing of this issue in dentistry, the profession may have the potential to alter prevailing cultural attitudes towards the ideal dental appearance, especially as teeth are an essential part of the physiognomic assessment that is often made of an individual's character and morality. Comment should be made on the fluidity of cultural preferences in dental appearance. Blackened teeth, that elicit stigma and assumptions of low socio-economic status and self-neglect in Western culture today, would have led to opposite conclusions of affluence in the 16th and 17th centuries. The cost of sugar in these periods meant that tooth decay was an affliction of the rich. Likewise, tooth blackening (as opposed to teeth whitening) was once considered to be an enhancement of beauty, partly favoured as it disguised the sharpness of canines which were associated with animalistic or evil tendencies. Within Japanese culture, there is a preference, in some, for "yaeba"; a characteristic appearance where the canine teeth are prominent. It is believed that this prominence suggests a youthfulness and is considered to be attractive by many. Whilst many have their teeth aligned to conform to the Western preference of straight teeth, having orthodontics to pronounce canines is still relatively common. Across cultures, preferences in tooth appearance may contrast and the current preference for uniformity in alignment and enhanced brightness in Western culture may change in the future. In this discourse examining cosmetic dentistry, the problems of attempting to separate the practice of dental cosmetics, and treatments that may be categorised as treating dental disease and suffering, become evident. The insistence that cosmetic dentistry somehow sits outside of the professional purview of dentistry is untenable based upon both how oral health is defined, and the great value that society places on dental appearance. Instead, the distinction must be made between cosmetic dentistry and commercially-focused dentistry, where the practice and role of the dental professional changes to being one more similar to a facilitator of consumerist culture. Often, this is where tensions between cosmetic dentistry and notions of professionalism have arisen, the established and commonly-held belief being that commercialism and that aspect of dentistry are inextricably linked. Cosmetic dentistry has no moral value attached to it that makes it immediately objectionable to professional purpose. Where this becomes compromised is through the introduction of action of behalf of the profession that conflict with the effacement of self-interest, such as exploitative advertising, overtreatment or defacement of the dentist-patient relationship into one of commercial exchange. It can be concluded that cosmetic dentistry can deliver benefits to oral health and join the pantheon of professional dentistry, but only when the requirements of informed consent that preserve patient autonomy and resistance to commercial factors are observed. The ethics of care of the self and the concept of the dental gaze may be thought to be opposites of the same coin; patients should have the freedom to consume cosmetic dentistry in a manner which will develop personal growth and self-improvement. To refuse cosmetic dentistry as an ethical tool for this purpose would be to deny a bona fide instrument of self-cultivation. The converse in this relationship is the dominance and authority of the dental profession, with the dentist placed as the arbiter of the norms of dental appearance. Professional judgement is then developed into a sales-pitch to sell this normalised view of what dental appearance should be. In this, the dentist acts to validate and impose the socially determined parameters of what might be considered an ideal dental appearance. The findings of this study into the nature of cosmetic dentistry have implications for how treatment that is primarily aesthetic in nature may be judged by the profession, and by those that fund public dental services. 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Zumbroich, T. J. (2009). 'Teeth as black as a bumble bee's wings': The ethnobotany of teeth blackening in Southeast Asia. Ethnobotany Research & Applications, 7, 381-398. Introduction Definitions and Legitimacy: Self-Care Ethics and Concepts of Cosmesis in Dentistry Cosmetic Dentistry and Consumerism The Dental Gaze and Cosmetic Dentistry Conclusion Footnotes Cosmetic dentistry is a divisive discipline. Within discourses that raise questions of the purpose of the dental profession, cosmetic dentistry is frequently criticised on the basis of it being classified as a non-therapeutic intervention. This article re-evaluates this assertion through examination of ethics of care of the self, healthcare definitions and the social purpose of dentistry, finding the traditional position to be wanting in its conclusions. The slide of dentistry from a healthcare vocation towards being a predominantly business-focused interaction between clinician and consumer conflicts with traditional notions of dentistry as a profession. Whilst it is undeniable that cosmetic dental treatment particularly lends itself to the commercial paradigm, this is not exclusive to this area of professional practice. The cultural basis of dental appearance and the potential of the dental profession to exert coercive pressure upon the public to undergo treatment that is based upon social norms is discussed. This essay concludes that cosmetic dentistry is undeniably part of the professional purpose of 21st Century dentistry. However, the caveat that may be placed upon this, is that this status is conditional upon the professional conduct of dental practitioners remaining resilient to commercial practices not compatible with professional obligations. C1 [Holden, Alexander C. 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