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Friday, April 11 | 8:00 – 9:15 a.m.

Session Title: 401 – Innovations in AI and Machine Learning in Population Research
Session Type: Oral
Room: Treasury
Discussant 1: Tyler Mccormick, University of Washington
Discussant 2: Yue Chu, The Ohio State University
Chair: Junhe Yang, University of Washington
Final Session Number: 16

Presentation:

Residential Mobility Patterns Following Repetitive Flood Exposure in Eastern North Carolina in the United States
H. Garcia, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; M. Hino, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Frankenberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; K. Anarde, North Carolina State University.


Session Title: Migration and Health Across the Life Course
Session Type: Oral
Room: Silver Linden
Discussant: Tyler Myroniuk, University of Missouri
Chair: Rama Hagos, Princeton University
Final Session Number: 15

Presentation:

Immigrant Generation and Racial/Ethnic Trajectories of Self-rated Health and Depressive Symptomology From Adolescence to Early Midlife in the United States
F. Touma, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Hamilton, University of California, Davis; R. Hummer, Carolina Population Center.


Session Title: Injury, Poisoning, and Other External Causes of Mortality and Morbidity
Session Type: Oral
Room: Mint
Discussant: Antonino Polizzi
Chair: Mathew Kiang, Stanford University
Final Session Number: 17

Presentation:

Does Despair in Young Adulthood Predict Mortality?
I. Gutin, Syracuse University; L. Gaydosh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Climate and Demographic Futures
Session Type: Oral
Room: Dupont Circle
Discussant: Clark Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Nicolas Choquette-Levy, Boston University
Final Session Number: 19

Presentations:

  • The Impacts of Disasters on Family Formation and Intergenerational Inequality: The Case of the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami
    H. Sugimoto, The University of Tokyo.
  • The Long-Term Human Capital Consequences of Exposures to Natural Disasters: Evidence From India
    Y. Zhang, University of Houston.
  • Attitudes of Place and Migration Aspirations: A Mixed Methods Inquiry
    A. Wallace, Carolina Population Center; E. Frankenberg, University of North Carolina at Chape lHill; E. Wright, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; A. Gardner, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Stoutamire, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Projecting Future Temperature-Related Mortality in Europe Under Global Climate Change
    R. Gualdi, University of Bologna; R. Conte Keivabu, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; A. Tamburini; R. Muttarak, University of Bologna.

Session Title: Family Dynamics and Children’s Socioemotional and Health Outcomes
Session Type: Oral
Room: Judiciary Square
Discussant 1: Holly Baker, University of California, San Diego
Chair: Qi Li, University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Final Session Number: 4

Presentation:

Mother, Father, and Grandparent Caregiving and the Cognitive and Socioemotional Skills of Children in Rural Pakistan
M. K. Kim, Carolina Population Center | UNC Chapel Hill; E. Chung, RTI International; A. Collins, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; M. Escobar, University of Melbourne; A. Frost, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; A. Ghosh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ; A. Rahman, University of Liverpool; K. Shartle, Duke University; P. Yulu, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; J. Maselko, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Friday, April 11 | 8:30 – 10:00 a.m.

Session Title: Aging and the Life Course/Applied Demography
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P01

Presentation:

Neighborhood Selection and Natural Disasters: Purposive Residential Mobility After Hurricanes
A. Gardner, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Friday, April 11 | 9:30 – 10:45 a.m.

Session Title: Poverty Measurement: New Advances and Insights
Session Type: Oral
Room: Capitol Hill
Discussant: Tim Smeeding, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Chair: Tim Smeeding, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Final Session Number: 30

Presentation:

The Impact of Precise Geographic Adjustments on the Supplemental Poverty Measure
J. T. Mueller, University of Kansas Medical Center; D. Sullivan, University of Kansas MedicalCenter; M. Brooks, Florida State University; R. Baker, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Climate Variability and Health Across the Life Course
Session Type: Flash
Room: Scarlet Oak
Chair: Andy Sharma, Wichita State University
Final Session Number: 40

Presentation:

Older Adults in the Midst of Extreme Events
B. Stoutamire, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Frankenberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Friday, April 11 | 10:30 – 12 p.m.

Session Title: Children, Intergenerational Relationships/Gender and Sexuality
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P02

Presentations:

  • A Mixed Methods Impact Evaluation of an Intervention to Address School-Related Gender-Based Violence in Zambia
    M. Ebrahim, World Bank Group; W. Chang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Friedson-Ridenour, World Bank Group; A. Jose, Trinity College Dublin; T. Bedi, Trinity College Dublin; M. King, Trinity College Dublin; Y. Chavarria, University of Wisconsin Madison; C. G. Barrantes, University of Wisconsin Madison.
  • Economic Stress, Intimate Relationship Quality, and Partner Violence During Adolescence and Early Adulthood in Malawi
    A. Pereira, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Handa, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; J. Chunga, University of Malawi; M. Tsoka, University of Malawi.
  • Determinants of Sexual Minority Mental Health Disparities: A Decomposition Analysis
    S. Petry, UNC Chapel Hill; K. M. Harris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; C. Halpern, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Transition to Adulthood Over the Decades: What Are the Most Common Patterns?
    R. Iwo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Do Cash Transfers Impact Noncognitive Skills of Low-Income Youth?
    D. Bathia, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; S. Handa, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Friday, April 11 | 11:00 – 12:15 p.m.

Session Title: Gender Inequality in Caregiving
Session Type: Oral
Room: Capitol Hill
Discussant: Rachel Goldberg, University of California Irvine
Chair: Sarah Patterson, University of Michigan
Final Session Number: 51

Presentation:

Feeding Into Inequality: How Breastfeeding Shapes Gendered Roles in Parenting and Paid Employment in the United States
J. Su, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Gender- and Sexuality-Based Violence
Session Type: Oral
Room: Pentagon
Discussant: Signe Svallfors, Stanford University
Chair: Fernanda Fortes De Lena, Centre for Demographic Studies (CED)
Final Session Number: 54

Presentation:

The “Patriarchy of the Wage” and Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence From Brazil
C. Brehm, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Medicaid and Population Health
Session Type: Oral
Room: LeDroit Park
Discussant: Ashley Erceg, US Census Bureau
Chair: Nick Graetz, University of Minnesota
Final Session Number: 55

Presentation:

An Alternative Path to Health Insurance? The Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Participation
D. Sullivan, University of Kansas Medical Center; M. Brooks, Florida State University; R. Baker, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; J. T. Mueller, University of Kansas Medical Center.


Session Title: How Governance, Power, and Policies Shape Mortality in the United States
Session Type: Oral
Room: Eastern Market
Discussant: Andrew Fenelon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Chair: Kaitlyn Berry, University of Minnesota
Final Session Number: 58

Presentation:

The Structure of Local Government and Spatial Variation in Midlife Mortality
R. O’Brien, Yale University; R. Manduca, University of Michigan; A. Venkataramani, University of Pennsylvania; M. Schechtl, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Major Trends in the Demography of Aging: Celebrating the 30th Anniversary of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) P30 Centers
Session Type: Invited Session
Room: Supreme Court
Chair: Jennifer Karas Montez, Syracuse University
Final Session Number: 63

Presentation:

Climate Change
E. Frankenberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Friday, April 11 | 1:45 – 3:15 p.m.

Session Title: Health and Health Behavior
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P03

Presentation:

Cardiometabolic Risk in the Study of Stress, Gender, and Minority Status (SGM SOL): An Evaluation of the Minority Stress Model With Resilience (MS 1412)
K. Perreira, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Wright, University of North Carolina; L.Gallo, San Diego State University; A. Harkness, University of Miami; C. Isasi, Albert Einstein College of Medicine; A. Pirzada, University of Illinois-Chicago; S. Thomas, University of Minnesota-Minneapolis; F. Penedo, University of Miami; M. Daviglus, University of Illinois-Chicago; B.Thyagarajan, University of Minnesota; C. Cordero, University of Miami; D. Sotres-Alvarez, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; T. Poteat, Duke.


Friday, April 11 | 2:00 – 3:15 p.m.

Session Title: Innovative Methodologies in Abortion Research
Session Type: Oral
Room: Shaw
Chair: Ilene Speizer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 77

Presentations:

  • Using Respondent-Driven Sampling to Understand Care-seeking Behavior Among Women Who Have Had a Recent Abortion in Kenya
    M. Giorgio, Guttmacher Institute; K. Juma, African Population Health and Research Center(APHRC); O. Owolabi, Guttmacher Institute; I. Akuku, APHRC.
  • Self-managed Community-Based Abortion in Argentina: Key Findings From a Web-Based Respondent-Driven Sampling Study
    A. Cleeve, Karolinska Institutet; X. Lu, National University of Defense Technology; A. Cleeve, Karolinska Institutet; M. Stein, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM);M. Vila Ortiz, Karolinska Institutet; A. Kågesten, Karolinska Institutet; A. Lavelanet, Human Reproduction Program/World Health Organization; Y. Helms, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM); A. Thorson, TDR/World Health Organization; K. Gemzell Danielsson, Karolinska Institutet; V. Brizuela, Human Reproduction Program/World Health Organization; S.Ramos, Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad (CEDES) ; V. M. Tiseyra, Centro de Estudios deEstado y Sociedad (CEDES) ; G. Bartolelli, Centro Rosarino de Estudios Perinatales (CREP); E.Abalos, Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad (CEDES) ; M. Romero, Centro de Estudios deEstado y Sociedad (CEDES).
  • Harnessing Digital Trace Data to Study the Impact of Abortion Legislation in South America
    K. Del Salto Calderon, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; J. Wilde, University of Oxford; R. Biesma, University Medical Center Utrecht.
  • Quality of Medication Abortion Services From Pharmacies and Drug Stores in Ethiopia: A Mystery Client Study
    A. Cartwright, Guttmacher Institute; S. Kung, Guttmacher Institute; D. Bekele, St. Paul Institute for Reproductive Health and Rights (SPIRHR); N. Tadele, Addis Ababa University; M. Yihdego, Performance Monitoring for Action (PMA) Ethiopia; K. Lemma, St. Paul’s Hospital Millennium Medical College; T. Hurisa, St. Paul’s Hospital Millennium Medical College.

Session Title: Time Use in Comparative Perspective
Session Type: Oral
Room: L’Enfant Plaza
Discussant: Léa Pessin, European University Institute
Chair: Jennifer Hook, University of Southern California
Final Session Number: 75

Presentation:

The Diverging Imagined Futures of Childbearing: Exploring the Role of Subjective Social Status and Perspectives of the Future on Fertility Goals
A. Long; K. Guzzo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; A. Thompson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; M. Hoke, University of North Carolina.


Friday, April 11 | 3:30 – 4:45 p.m.

Session Title: Climatic Change and Demography in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Session Type: Oral
Room: Tulip
Discussant 1: Srinivas Goli, International Institute for Population Sciences
Discussant 2: Barbara Entwisle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Erich Striessnig, University of Vienna, Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (IIASA, OeAW, University of Vienna)
Final Session Number: 91

Presentations:

  • Temperature and Learning in West and Central Africa
    J. Behrman, Northwestern University; Y. Vidogbena, University of Houston; L. Andriano, University of Southampton; R. Conte Keivabu, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research.
  • Integrating Demographic and Epidemiological Transitions Into Climate Impact Projections: A Case Study in Antananarivo, Madagascar
    E. Kuijt, EDSD; B. Masquelier, Centre for Demographic Research, Université catholique de Louvain.
  • Vulnerability Contexts, Climate Change, and Child Malnutrition in Bangladesh
    Z. Salim, Penn State.
  • Hedging Against Climate Risks: Long-Term Versus Circular Migration in Rural India
    S. Gupta, National Council of Applied Economic Research; P. Choudhuri, National Council of Applied Economic Research; B. Chouhan, National Council of Applied Economic Research.

Session Title: Fertility in Social Context
Session Type: Oral
Room: Dupoint Circle
Discussant: Nicholas Mark, University of Wisconsin Madison
Chair: Ester Lazzari, University of Vienna
Final Session Number: 94

Presentation:

U.S. Fertility Patterns in a Nationally Representative Contemporary Cohort of Women Nearing the End of Their Childbearing Years
K. M. Harris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Koning, University of Nevada, Reno.


Session Title: Flash: Methodological Innovations in Migration Research
Session Type: Flash
Room: Scarlet Oak
Chair: Margot Moinester, Washington University in St. Louis
Final Session Number: 98

Presentation:

Innovations in Multisited Approaches to Sampling International Migrants: A Feasibility and Evaluation Study
G. Merli, Duke University; C. Flippen, University of Pennsylvania; A. Bawah, University of Ghana; J.Behrman, University of Pennsylvania; I. Elo, University of Pennsylvania; T. Mouw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Friday, April 11 | 3:45 – 5:15 p.m.

Session Title: Migration, Development, and Environment
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P04

Presentation:

  • Reproductive Autonomy in the Face of Changing Temperature and Precipitation: A Case Study of Egypt and Jordan
    G. Gemayel, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; C. Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • The Burden of Debt: Generation Status and Health Outcomes Among the Black Adult Diaspora
    A. Owirodu, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Friday, April 11 | 5:00 – 6:15 p.m.

 

Session Title: Methodological and Data Innovations in Fertility and Family Planning
Session Type: Oral
Room: Tulip
Discussant: Elizabeth Sully, Guttmacher Institute
Chair: Celia Karp, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Final Session Number: 109

Presentation:

Measuring the Intersection of Contraceptive Desire and Use: Comparing Preference-Aligned Fertility Management and Aligned Contraceptive Use
B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; E. Felker-Kantor, Population Services International; G. Golub, Innovations for Poverty Action; D. Crapper, Population Services International; M. Randriamanjaka, Population Services International; B. Frizzelle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Sylvia, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Linked Data for Population Health
Session Type: Oral
Room: Woodley Park
Discussant: Evan Roberts, University of Minnesota
Chair: Carlyn Graham, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 105

Presentations:

  • Differential Record Linkage and Implications for Racial/Ethnic and Foreign-born/Native-born Disparities in Adult Mortality
    J. Lariscy, Texas A&M University; C. L. Cisneros Franco.
  • Assisted Housing and Changes in Household Composition
    K. Perkins, Georgetown University.
  • Partner Age Gaps and the Risk of Intimate Partner Violence
    L. Andersen, Rockwool Foundation; M. Lautrup, The Rockwool Foundation.

Saturday, April 12 | 8:00 – 9:15 a.m.

Session Title: Parents, Health, and Well-being
Session Type: Oral
Room: Mount Vernon Square
Discussant: Jessica Su, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Sarah Salas, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Final Session Number: 123

Presentations:

  • Subjective Well-being of Single Parents in Europe: A Multilevel Analysis
    A. Ballerini, University of Florence; R. Guetto; D. Vignoli, University of Florence; S. Florian, French National Institute for Demographic Studies (INED).
  • Union Dissolution and Parental Mental Health: A Gender Perspective
    S. Molina, Humboldt University and Hertie School; M. Kreyenfeld, Hertie School; J. Lorraine O’Sullivan, Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin.
  • Better Off Without You? Poverty, Single Motherhood, Coupled Mothers Conflict, and Self-reported Health
    H. Zagel, WZB Berlin Social Science Center; M. Treanor, University of Glasgow.
  • Birth Outcomes in Single Motherhood “by Choice”: A Register Study of Children Conceived Through Medically Assisted Reproduction
    A. Goisis, University College London; A. Pelikh, University College London; H. Remes, University of Helsinki; M. Kühn, Tilburg University; P. Martikainen, University of Helsinki.

Saturday, April 12 | 8:30 – 10:30 a.m.

Session Title: Neighborhoods and Communities/Race and Ethnicity/Legal Institutions
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P05

Presentation:

  • Revisiting the Weathering Hypothesis: Asian–White Disparities in Physiological Functioning in the United States
    A. Ro, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; M. Zhang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Y. C. Yang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Exposure to Deadly Neighborhood Gun Violence and Biological Aging During Adolescence
    C. Martz, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; M. Farina, University of Texas at Austin; K. Theall, Tulane School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine; C. Mitchell, University of Michigan; L. Gaydosh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Disciplining Sexuality: Structural Stigma, Incarceration, and Allostatic Load Disparities Between Sexual Minority and Heterosexual Americans
    S. Tuder, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Place and Racial Identity Contestation Among Latinos
    R. Rosa-Lebron, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Saturday, April 12 | 9:30 – 10:45 a.m.

Session Title: Social Isolation Across the Life Course
Session Type: Oral
Room: Cherry Blossom
Discussant: Kaitlin Shartle, Duke University
Chair: Adam Roth, Oklahoma State University
Final Session Number: 136

Presentation:

Is Social Isolation During Adolescence Associated With Poor Health in Adulthood?
H. Jiang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; R. Hummer, Carolina Population Center; F. Touma, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Flash: Wealth Inequality: International Comparative Perspectives
Session Type: Flash
Room: Dogwood
Chair: Doron Shiff er-Sebba, Northwestern University
Final Session Number: 141

Presentation:

The Association Between Wealth Inequality and Life Expectancy in the United States
M. Schechtl, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; R. O’Brien, Yale University; A.Venkataramani, University of Pennsylvania; E. Zang, Yale University.


Session Title: Global Perspectives on Immigration
Session Type: Oral
Room: Mint
Discussant: Hector Cebolla-Boado
Chair: Amparo Gonzalez Ferrer, CSIC – SPAIN
Final Session Number: 151

Presentation:

The Differential Roles of Migration Exposures in the Timing of Migration
K. Klaunig, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Saturday, April 12 | 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.

Session Title: Mortality and Morbidity/Demography of Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P06

Presentations:

  • Heterogeneity in Medicaid Expansion and Maternal Mortality: Rurality, Race, and Disability
    D. Sullivan, University of Kansas Medical Center; M. Brooks, Florida State University; R. Baker, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; J. T. Mueller, University of Kansas Medical Center.
  • Parent Migration and Children’s Long-Term Mental Health Outcomes
    E. Banchoff , University of Michigan; E. Labovitz, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Childhood Anemia in a Changing Climate
    A. Rojas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; G. Gemayel, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; C. Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Thiede, Pennsylvania State University; A. Thompson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Saturday, April 12 | 11:00 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.

Session Title: Late Fertility
Session Type: Oral
Room: Capitol
Discussant: Alicia Adsera, Princeton University
Chair: Letizia Mencarini, Bocconi University
Final Session Number: 166

Presentation:

Contextualizing Fertility Delays: A Temporal and Multinational Assessment
K. Tierney, Western Michigan University; K. Guzzo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Hayford, The Ohio State University; E. Beaujouan, University of Vienna – Wittgenstein Centre.


Session Title: Drivers of Forced Migration
Session Type: Oral
Room: Scarlet Oak
Discussant 1: Fernando Riosmena, University of Texas at San Antonio
Discussant 2: Hugh Roland, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Chair: Tyler Myroniuk, University of Missouri
Final Session Number: 172

Presentation:

Violent Social Conflict as a Driver of Migration: A Systematic Review
J. Mancilla Uribe, UNC Chapel Hill; B. Entwisle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Demographics of Climate Risk Assessments and Adaptive Responses
Session Type: Oral
Room: Dupont Circle
Discussant: Ethan Raker, The University of British Columbia
Chair: Sara Curran, University of Washington
Final Session Number: 176

Presentation:

Adapting to Rising Environmental Risk in the North Carolina Coastal Plain
E. Frankenberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; K. Cowan; N. Dollar, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; H. Garcia, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; A. Gardner, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; M. Hino, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; R. Iwo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; N. Kothegal, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Stoutamire, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Innovations in Data for Fertility and Family Planning
Session Type: Oral
Room: Union Station
Discussant: Kerry MacQuarrie, The DHS Program (Avenir Health)
Chair: Yingyi Lin, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Final Session Number: 167

Presentation:

Contraceptive Side Effects Discourse on TikTok: A Methodological Case Study Leveraging Popular TikToks for Timely Insights
E. Pleasants, UNC Chapel Hill; B. Whitfield, University of Texas at Austin; Z. Pleasure, University of Washington; E. Norrell, UC Berkeley; C. Smith, UNC Chapel Hill; C. Fallon, University of South Carolina; E. Anderson, University of California, Berkeley; L. Lindberg, Rutgers University.


Saturday, April 12 | 1:45 – 3:15 p.m.

Session Title: Education, Work, and Economic Inequality
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P07

Presentation:

Should I Stay or Should I Go: Assessing the Relationship Between Remote Work and Voluntary Employer Exit
P. Casey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Saturday, April 12 | 2:00 – 3:15 p.m.

Session Title: Spatial Data Collection and Methods
Session Type: Oral
Room: Treasury
Discussant: Mathew Hauer, Florida State University
Chair: Micol Morellini, University of Oxford
Final Session Number: 180

Presentation:

Patient Addresses in Electronic Health Records: New Source of Data on Spatial Mobility?
A. Bhatia, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Entwisle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Demography of Crime and Race
Session Type: Oral
Room: Mount Vernon Square
Discussant: Carmen Gutierrez, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Evelyn Patterson, Georgetown University
Final Session Number: 198

Presentations:

  • The Role of Neighborhood Enforcement for Marijuana Offenses and Its Impact on Public Housing Communities in New York City
    E. Grimsley, Baruch College, CUNY.
  • Minority Representation and Criminal Justice: The Impact of Election of Black Mayors on Racial Sentencing Disparities
    M. Poyker, UT Austin, LBJ School; M. Rosenberg, Essex.
  • Causes of Mortality Disparities Through the Lens of Prison Mortality
    M. Lisch, University of Texas at Austin.
  • Risk of Death During Police Encounters in France Across Age, Gender, and Racial Groups
    R. Galbiati, Sciences Po; A. Ouss, University of Pennsylvania; M. Safi , Sciences Po; Z. Van Winkle, Sciences Po Paris.

Session Title: Sexual and Gender Minority Identities, Relationships, and Health Across Contexts
Session Type: Oral
Room: LeDroit Park
Discussant: Alexandra Vanbergen, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Chair: Tara Mckay, Vanderbilt University
Final Session Number: 190

Presentation:

“I Worry About Being Alone”: Hopes and Concerns About Aging Among Transgender Women in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
C. Barrington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; G. Sandor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; L. Gastelumendi, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Mus, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; I. Higgins, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; H. Gomez, Instituto Dermatologico Dominicano y Cirugia de Piel ; Y. Donastorg, Instituto Dermatologico Dominicano y Cirugia de Piel ; M. Perez, Instituto Dermatologico Dominicano y Cirugia de Piel ; D.Kerrigan, George Washington University.


Session Title: Climate Migration, Morbidity, and Mortality Dynamics
Session Type: Oral
Room: Dupont Circle
Discussant: Julia Behrman, Northwestern University
Chair: Landy Sanchez, El Colegio de Mexico
Final Session Number: 197

Presentation:

Cash Transfers Relax Climate-Induced Mobility Constraints
V. Mueller, Arizona State University; C. Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Handa, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Social Networks, Identity, and Health in Uncertain Times
Session Type: Oral
Room: Tulip
Discussant: Courtney Thomas Tobin, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health
Chair: Taylor Hargrove, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 191

Presentations:

  • Gender and Sexual Identity Differences in Early COVID-19 Stress and Later Resilience Among a Cohort of First-Year College Students
    C. Easterly, UNC Chapel Hill; K. Perreira, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Cooper, UNC-Chapel Hill; J. Fruehwirth.
  • Social Networks and Their Role in COVID-19 Vaccine Attitudes, Beliefs, and Behaviors: Evidence From California
    A. Comfort, University of California San Francisco; L. Abascal, University of California, San Francisco; A. Epperson, University of California, Merced; A. Riley, University of California, Santa Cruz; J. Vallin, University of California, San Francisco; M. Garcia, University of California, Merced; D. Leon, University of California, Santa Cruz; N. Diamond-Smith, University of California, San Francisco.
  • Understanding the Social and Emotional Support of Teenagers: A National Health Interview Survey–Teen investigation
    B. Zablotsky, CDC; A. Ng, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; L. Black, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; J. Bose, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; J. Jones, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; S. Blumberg, National Center for Health Statistics.
  • Skin Tone–Linked Fate and Psychological Distress
    T. Bilaye-Benibo, Baylor University; M. Andersson, Baylor University.

Saturday, April 12 | 3:30 – 4:45 p.m.

Session Title: Rural Aging
Session Type: Oral
Room: Cherry Blossom
Discussant 1: Xi Pan, Texas State University
Discussant 2: Christine Mair, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Chair: Sigrid Van Den Abbeele, University of California, Santa Barbara
Final Session Number: 200

Presentation:

Prevalence and Correlates of Caregiver Burden Among Carers of Older Persons Living With Dementia in Rural Eastern Uganda
S. Wandera, Makerere University; M. Diaz Maria, UNC Chapel Hill; N. Nakasujja, Makerere University; L. H Rubin, Johns Hopkins University.


Session Title: Contextual, Institutional, and Policy Determinants of Intergenerational Mobility
Session Type: Oral
Room: Judiciary Square
Discussant: Masoud Movahed, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Haowen Zheng, Cornell University
Final Session Number: 205

Presentation:

Childhood Exposure to Local Wealth Inequality, Economic Isolation in Schools, and Interclass Social Ties in Adulthood
M. Schechtl, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Relationships, Psychosocial Infl uences, and Fertility Preferences
Session Type: Oral
Room: Capitol
Discussant: Michelle Eilers, University of Minnesota
Chair: Sneha Kumar, Northwestern University
Final Session Number: 210

Presentation:

Physical and Mental Health and Fertility Goals Among U.S. Couples
K. Guzzo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; G. Juteau, Bowling Green State University; W. Manning, Bowling Green State University; C. Kamp Dush, University of Minnesota.


Session Title: Reproductive Justice, Autonomy, and Coercion
Session Type: Oral
Room: Eastern Market
Discussant: Elizabeth Pleasants, UNC Chapel Hill
Chair: Monika Nayak, University of California, Los Angeles
Final Session Number: 212

Presentations:

  • Perceptions of Advance Provision of Medication Abortion in the United States and Implications for Reproductive Autonomy
    D. Johnson, University of Wisconsin-Madison; S. Ramaswamy, University of Texas at Austin; R. Gomperts, Aid Access; A. Aiken, University of Texas at Austin.
  • Keeping the “R” in “LARCs” (Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptives): Measuring Quality-Centered Implant Removal Services in Sub-Saharan Africa
    C. Karp, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; L. Zimmerman, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; L. Senderowicz, University of Wisconsin -Madison.
  • Discordance Between Abortion Method and Modality Preferences and Realized Outcomes in a Cohort of Indiana Abortion Seekers Pre-Dobbs
    A. Wollum, Ibis Reproductive Health; R. Murro, University of California, San Francisco; H. Moseson, Ibis Reproductive Health.
  • Preferred Contraceptive Method Access in Public Facilities in Western Kenya: A Mixed Methods Analysis of Reasons for Nonpreferred Method Use Using Mystery Client Data
    S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; D. Onyango, Kisumu Country Department of Health; L. Senderowicz, University of Wisconsin – Madison; L. Jennings Mayo-Wilson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; J. Daniels, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; B. Pence, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; S. Curtis, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; A. Bryant, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, School of Medicine.

Session Title: Measuring Kinship Networks and Ties to Kin
Session Type: Oral
Room: L’Enfant Plaza
Discussant: Gabrielle Juteau, Bowling Green State University
Chair: Rene Iwo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 208

Presentations:

  • Specifying Family Networks to Better Measure Family Contexts
    L. Pearce, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; J. Wertsching, UNC Chapel Hill; K. Joshua, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; A. Thompson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; D. Haynie, OSU.
  • Estimating Extended Family Coresidence in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics: A Cautionary Note
    B. Xiao, Harvard University.
  • The Emotional Cost of Closeness: How Latinx Families Navigated Challenges to Familism During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    G. Flores, University of California, Merced; A. Mireles, University of California, Merced; D. Reyes, University of California, Merced.

Saturday, April 12 | 4:00 – 5:30 p.m.

Session Title: Family Demography
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P08

Presentations:

  • The Moderating Role of Early-Life Family Environment on the Education–Health Relationship
    H. Cheng, School of Education, UNC-Chapel Hill.
  • The Impact of Marital Trajectories on Late-Life Social Isolation: A U.S.–China Comparison
    L. Wang, Boston University; Y. C. Yang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Sunday, April 13 | 8:30 – 10:00 a.m.

Session Title: Fertility, Family Planning, Sexual Behavior, and Reproductive Health
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P09

Presentations:

  • Where and Why Women Source Contraceptive Methods in Kisumu, Kenya
    E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; D. Otieno Onyango, Kisumu County Department of Health, Kisumu; L. Senderowicz, University of Wisconsin – Madison; A. Mwanyiro, Innovation for Poverty Action(IPA); B. Wekesa, Innovation for Poverty Action (IPA); B. Frizzelle, Carolina Population Center; G. Golub, Innovation for Poverty Action (IPA); C. Rothschild, Population Services International.
  • Comparative Perceptions of Wait Times for Family Planning Services Among Contraceptive Users and Mystery Clients in Kisumu, Kenya
    S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; D. Onyango, Kisumu Country Department of Health; L. Senderowicz, University of Wisconsin – Madison; A. Mwanyrio, Innovations for Poverty Action, Kenya; B. Wekesa, Innovations for Poverty Action, Kenya; B. Frizzelle, Carolina Population Center; G. Golub, Innovations for Poverty Action, Kenya; C. Rothschild, Population Services International.
  • Barriers to Contraceptive Use and Preferred Method Use in Kisumu, Kenya
    S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; D. Onyango, Kisumu Country Department of Health; L. Senderowicz, University of Wisconsin – Madison; A. Mwanyrio, Innovations for Poverty Action, Kenya; B. Wekesa, Innovations for Poverty Action, Kenya; B. Frizzelle, Carolina Population Center; G. Golub, Innovations for Poverty Action, Kenya; C. Rothschild, Population Services International.
  • Measuring Misaligned Contraceptive Use Among Reproductive-Aged Women in Kisumu, Kenya
    B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; C. Rothschild, Population Services International; D. Onyango, Kisumu County Department of Health; L. Senderowicz, University of Wisconsin – Madison; E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; A. Mwanyiro, Innovations for Poverty Action; B. Wekesa, Innovations for Poverty Action; B. Frizzelle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; G. Golub, Innovations for Poverty Action; K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess the Impact of Social Accountability on Contraceptive Behavior, Agency, and Quality of Care in Kisumu, Kenya
    K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Sylvia; D. Onyango, Kisumu County Health Department; E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; A. Mwanyiro, Innovations for Poverty Action; B. Wekesa, Innovations for Poverty Action; B. Frizzelle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; G. Golub, Innovations for Poverty Action.
  • Investigating Pregnancy Preferences and Incident Pregnancy in the United States Using Novel, Population-Based Survey Data
    B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; I. Munoz, University of California Berkeley and San Francisco; J. Boscardin, University of California, San Francisco; C. Rocca, University of California, San Francisco.
  • Informal and Out-of-Pocket Payments for Public-Sector Contraceptive Care in Remote Madagascar
    K. Tumlinson, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Goland, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill; S. Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Bullington, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Frizzelle, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; E. Kioko, Innovations for Poverty Action; G. Golub, Innovations for Poverty Action; E. Felker-Kantor, Population Services International; M. Randriamanjaka, Population Services International, Madagascar; A. Rabemanantsoa, Population Services International, Madagascar; D. Crapper, Population Services International, Madagascar; S. Sylvia.

Sunday, April 13 | 9:00 – 10:15 a.m.

Session Title: Inequality and the Early Life Course
Session Type: Oral
Room: Silver Linden
Discussant: Molly Martin, Penn State University
Chair: Jingwen Liu, Rice University
Final Session Number: 222

Presentation:

Life Course Pathways From Socioeconomic Status Early in Life to Cognitive Function in Midlife: The Role of Occupational Characteristics
M. Zhang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Y. C. Yang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; W. Y. S. Ng, Columbia University; Y. Zhang, Columbia University.


Session Title: Traditional Family Planning Methods
Session Type: Oral
Room: Scarlet Oak
Discussant: Carlos Arnaldo, Universidade Eduardo Mondlane
Chair: Suzanne Bell, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Final Session Number: 229

Presentation:

“I’d Love to Get off Birth Control ’Cause I’d Love to Meet Me”: A Thematic Content Analysis Exploring Contraceptive Method Switching and Stopping Narratives on TikTok
Z. Pleasure, University of Washington; B. Whitfield, University of Texas at Austin; E. Pleasants, UNC Chapel Hill; E. Norrell, University of California, Berkeley; C. Smith, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; C. Fallon, University of South Carolina; E. Anderson, University of California, Berkeley; L. Lindberg, Rutgers University.


Session Title: Intersectionality and Health
Session Type: Oral
Room: LeDroit Park
Discussant: Cydney McGuire, Indiana University
Chair: Taylor Riley, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 231

Presentations:

  • Intersectional Inequalities in Life Course Aging Trajectories and Neighborhood Exposures
    R. Patti, University of Pennsylvania.
  • Does Muslim Immigrant Health Decline From Sociopolitical Stress? Evidence From County-Level Election Results and Birth Outcomes in the Trump Era
    N. Andrabi, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • An Examination of Anxiety and Depression as Predictors of Sleep Deficiency in Adult Black Female Populations in the United States:Understanding the Intersectionality of Race, Status, and Disability
    B. Adejugbe, Utah State University; A. Agbona, Texas A&M University.
  • Inclusive Intersectionality: Adult Well-being in the United States
    D. Shinberg, Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

Session Title: Enhancing Existing Data With Statistical and Demographic Methods
Session Type: Oral
Room: Treasury
Discussant: Aashish Gupta, University of Oxford
Chair: Eugenio Paglino, University of Helsinki
Final Session Number: 223

Presentation:

Using High Resolution Imagery and Neural Networks to Measure Destruction and Reconstruction After a Disaster
E. Peshkin, Duke University; E. Frankenberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; P. Katz, Duke University; C. Sumantri, Survey METER; D. Thomas, Duke University.


Sunday, April 13 | 10:30 – 11:45 a.m.

Session Title: Families and Health Across the Life Course
Session Type: Oral
Room: L’Enfant Plaza
Discussant: Emma Romell, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Chair: Virginia Leiter, Pennsylvania State University
Final Session Number: 245

Presentation:

Is Family Instability From Birth to Adolescence Associated With Accelerated Biological Aging in Adulthood?
H. Jiang, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; A. Kelly, The University of Texas at Austin; C. Martin; A. Aiello, Columbia University; K. Harris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; L. Gaydosh, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Racial/Ethnic Inequities in Fertility and Reproductive Processes and Outcomes
Session Type: Oral
Room: Mint
Discussant: Evangeline Warren, The Ohio State University
Chair: Tukufu Zuberi, University of Pennsylvania
Final Session Number: 248

Presentation:

Underlying Mechanisms of Racialized Inequities in U.S. Birth Outcomes: Uncovering the Role of Maternal Early-Life Disadvantage, Adolescent Contexts, and Prepregnancy Stress Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health
S. Koning, University of Nevada, Reno; T. Hargrove, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; T. Mcdade, Northwestern University; K. M. Harris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Sunday, April 13 | 10:30 – 11:45 a.m.

Session Title: Intersectionality: Measurement and Implications for Health Equity
Session Type: Oral
Room: LeDroit Park
Discussant: Alicia Riley, University of California, Santa Cruz
Chair: Taylor Riley, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 251

Presentations:

  • Later-Life Cognition at the Intersection of Country, Gender, and Occupation
    S. Mani, Johns Hopkins University; K. Kezios, Columbia University; M. Delaporte, University of Pennsylvania; T-C Cho; L. P. R. Saunero, UCLA; J. Weuve, Boston University; J. Avila-Rieger, Columbia University; L. Kobayashi, University of Michigan.
  • The Effects of Intersectional Stigma on the Depression of Non-White LGBTQ+ Populations
    S. Bastow, Florida State University; M. Taylor, Florida State University; C. Kamp Dush, University of Minnesota; W. Manning, Bowling Green State University; A. Vanbergen, University of Minnesota Twin Cities.
  • The BMI Gap Between and Within Single Race Versus Multiracial Adults: An Intersectional Analysis Considering Age, Gender, Education, and Ethnicity
    R. Jones-Antwi, Baylor University; S. Cunningham, Emory University.
  • Intersecting Health: How Measurement Choices Shape Social Group Disparities
    T. Liu, Princeton University; Y. Xie, Princeton University.

Session Title: Climate Change, Behavioral Adaptation, and Health
Session Type: Oral
Room: Mount Vernon Square
Discussant: Carina Gronlund, University of Michigan
Chair: Sadaf Milani, The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
Final Session Number: 252

Presentation:

Climate and Anemia in Reproductive-Age Women in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
A. Rojas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; C. Gray, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; B. Thiede, Pennsylvania State University; A. Thompson, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.


Session Title: Migration/Immigration and Demographic Change in the United States
Session Type: Oral
Room: Magnolia
Discussant: Theodore Mouw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Katharina Klaunig, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 253

Presentation:

  • Changing Occupational Segregation Between Immigrant and Native-born Workers in the United States
    K. Liao, University of California, Los Angeles; X. Song, University of Pennsylvania.
  • Black Immigrant Businesses, Black Immigrant Influx, and Neighborhood Change in Houston, Texas
    N. Dahir, The Ohio State University.
  • Diverse Perceptions of Ethnic Succession in a Low-Income Neighborhood: From African American to Latino Immigrant Dominance
    X. Zou, Louisiana State University.
  • The Rooted and the Unrooted: Multigenerational Paths of Migration Across the United States From the Mid-19th Century to the Mid-20th Century
    J. Goldstein, University of California, Berkeley; G. Stecklov, University of British Columbia.

Session Title: Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies and Programs
Session Type: Oral
Room: Tulip
Discussant: Ilene Speizer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Onikepe Owolabi, Guttmacher Institute
Final Session Number: 249

Presentations:

  • The Impact of a Social Network–Informed Intervention to Promote Use of Modern Contraception Among Young Wives in Rural Niger
    H. Baker, University of California, San Diego; S. Tomar; A. Hachimou; J. Gayles, Save the Children US ; J. Negi, University of California San Diego; K. Iredell, University of California San Diego; K. Boubacar Moussa, Save the Children Niger; N. Abdoul-Moumouni, Grade Africa; J. Silverman, University of California, San Diego.
  • Sexual and Reproductive Health Outcomes and Parent–Child Communication Among Youth in Western Kenya
    S. Ayieko, University of Iowa; N. Aluku, Africa Community Leadership and Development; A. Lee, University of Iowa; W. Story, University of Iowa.
  • Family Planning and Female Economic Empowerment in Sub-Saharan Africa: Causal Analysis Across the Life Course
    J. Seager, George Washington University; J. Hamory, University of Oklahoma; L. Parisotto, Bocconi University; S. Baird, George Washington University; B. Ozler, The World Bank.
  • Pharmacy Access Policies, Extended Supply Mandates, and Teen Birth Rates
    B. Hiedemann, Seattle University; B. Bowie, Seattle University; T. Nguyen, Seattle University; E. Vernon; M. Wark, Timberland Bank.

Sunday, April 13 | 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.

Session Title: Data and Methods/Other
Session Type: Poster
Room: Liberty & Independence Ballrooms
Final Session Number: P10

Presentations:

  • Enhancing Maternal and Child Health Service Coverage Estimates at the Sub-National Level Through Routine Health Facility Data Adjustment Techniques in Nigeria
    T. Chen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • How to Estimate Causal Effects Associated With Family Planning? An Introduction to Prince BART, a New Approach to Effect Estimation Based on Principal Stratification and Bayesian Nonparametric Models
    L. Godoy Garraza, University of Massachusetts Amherst; I. Speizer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; L. Alkema, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Sunday, April 13 | 12:00 – 1:15 p.m.

 

Session Title: International Migration/Immigration and Demographic Change
Session Type: Oral
Room: Magnolia
Discussant: Ruy Manrique, UNC-Chapel Hill
Chair: Theodore Mouw, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Final Session Number: 270

Presentations:

  • Migration or Stagnation: Aging and Economic Growth in Korea Today, the World Tomorrow
    M. Clemens, George Mason University.
  • Brain Drain or Brain Gain? Evidence From a Developing Country
    L. Méndez, Universidad de la Republica.
  • Bridging Data Gaps: Social Media and Traditional Sources in Assessing Migration in Latin America
    V. Prieto Rosas; C. Montiel, Programa de Población; G. Pedetti, Udelar; M. Koolhaas, Programa de Población; J. Bengochea, Universidad de la Republica; M. Fernández, Programa de Población; A. Rubini, FADU; M. Pedemonte, INCO FING.

Session Title: Maternal Morbidity and Mortality
Session Type: Oral
Room: Union Station
Discussant: Stephanie Chung, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chair: Lindsay Mallick, University of Maryland
Final Session Number: 271

Presentations:

  • Investigating Complex Care Needs, Severe Maternal Morbidity, and Mediating Mechanisms in a Medicaid-Insured Birthing Population, 2016–2022
    X. Yu, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine; H. Bolder, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine; L. A. Roman, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine; R. Meng, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine; J. Raff o, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine; C. Meghea, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine.
  • The Impact of Local Violent Crime on Maternal Mortality and Morbidity in Mexico
    S. Svallfors, Stockholm University; O. Torrisi, McGill University; M. Caudillo, University of Maryland.
  • Facility Staff Perspectives on the Implementation of Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response in Six Health Facilities in Kigoma, Tanzania
    S. Huber-Krum, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; F. Serbanescu, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); S. Hartley, National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Contro land Prevention; P. Spencer, Division of Reproductive Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Con; L. Galioto, National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Co; A. Msuya, National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Tanzani.
  • Racialized Inequities in Maternal Stress and Depression Post-Childbirth: A Critically Understudied Period in Maternal Health in a U.S. Population-Based Cohort
    S. Koning, University of Nevada, Reno; T. Hargrove, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; T. Mcdade, Northwestern University; K. M. Harris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.