Survey I (survey + i)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Association between stress and asthma symptoms: A population-based study

RESPIROLOGY, Issue 3 2004
Yeon-Mok OH
Objective: Although it is believed that stress contributes to asthma, there are no data from studies in the general population to support this belief. To determine whether stress influences asthma in the general population, a database from a nationwide survey to evaluate the relationship between stress and asthma symptoms was used in the present study. Methodology: A database generated by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I (in South Korea, 1998) was used for this cross-sectional study. Stratified random samples of 9263 subjects, aged 20 years or older, were selected from the entire population of the country; 95% of these subjects responded. Among the responders, 5048 subjects aged 20,44 years were included in the study. Subjects were interviewed using a questionnaire. Multivariate analysis was performed using multiple logistic regression. Results: The prevalence of wheeze and waking in the night because of cough or shortness of breath in the preceding 12 months was 12.9 and 13.5%, respectively. Multivariate analysis showed that the odds ratios for asthma symptoms increased according to the severity of stress reported by the subjects. When stress levels were classified into four categories of little, some, much and very much stress, the odds ratios for wheeze in the preceding 12 months were 1.7 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1, 2.5), 2.6 (95% CI 1.7, 4.0) and 3.6 (95% CI 2.1, 5.9) for subjects reporting some, much and very much stress, respectively, relative to those reporting little stress. Using the same stress-level classifications, the odds ratios for waking in the night because of cough or shortness of breath in the preceding 12 months were 1.5 (95% CI 1.0, 2.3), 2.4 (95% CI 1.6, 3.6) and 4.0 (95% CI 2.5, 6.4), respectively. Conclusion: This cross-sectional study shows an association between stress and asthma symptoms in the general population of South Korea. [source]


Sunburns, Sun Protection and Indoor Tanning Behaviors, and Attitudes Regarding Sun Protection Benefits and Tan Appeal among Parents of U.S. Adolescents,1998 Compared to 2004

PEDIATRIC DERMATOLOGY, Issue 1 2010
Priti Bandi M.S.
Data were from the American Cancer Society Sun Surveys I and II, telephone-based random digit dialed cross-sectional surveys of U.S. adolescents and their parents conducted in the summers of 1998 and 2004. Between 1998 and 2004, use of sunscreen, wide-brimmed hats and composite use of three to five behaviors increased significantly; concurrently, indoor tanning use increased significantly and sunburn prevalence changed a little. In 2004, 47% reported summer sunburns and more than half of those received painful sunburns. Parents continued to report low compliance with recommended behaviors; sunscreen use was most frequently reported, but many followed inappropriate application practices. About 13% practiced indoor tanning in the past year. Parents reported high levels of positive attitudes toward sun protection benefit, but at the same time, significant proportions reported positive tan appeal and outdoor sun exposure attitudes. The low rates and mixed progress in safe ultraviolet radiation exposure behaviors demand more attention for primary skin cancer prevention among parents of adolescents that focuses on changing beliefs about tanning appeal and promotes comprehensive ultraviolet radiation exposure protection. [source]


Civil Society or the State?: Recent Approaches to the History of Voluntary Welfare

JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL SOCIOLOGY, Issue 3 2002
Alan Kidd
Since the 1970s a drift away from state corporatist solutions to social welfare problems has had its parallel in an academic rediscovery of the voluntary sector. Revived confidence in non,statutory approaches often assumes two things. Firstly, that voluntary action is a vital component in civil society and that civil society itself is an attribute of liberal democracy. These ideas are central to the perceived ,crisis of the welfare state'. They are also related to debates about political culture and the future of democracy with the institutions of civil society cast positively as ,schools of citizenship'. Secondly, it is frequently assumed that there is an opposition in principle between the voluntary and the statutory and in some quarters an assumption (reversing an earlier presumption about the rationality of state welfare) that voluntary action is the superior mechanism (at least morally). The purpose of this paper is threefold. First, I want to reflect on the revival of interest in the role of the institutions of civil society in the history of welfare provision. Second, I will survey some recent approaches to voluntary action and ,civil society'. Third, in the process of this survey I discuss the relevance of these approaches to the study of past states of welfare. [source]


Party Identification in Emotional and Political Context: A Replication

POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 6 2007
Francis Neely
While testing an affective measure of party identification Burden and Klofstad (2005) found that using the phrase, "feel that you are," in place of, "think of yourself as," significantly shifted PID in a Republican direction. I adopt the theoretical framework of Affective Intelligence (Marcus, Neuman, & MacKuen, 2000) to specify how the timing of their question-wording experiment may have influenced the results. I suggest that the outcome was a function of (a) anxiety present during the survey, which ran just after 9/11 of 2001, coupled with (b) a political environment that favored Republicans. In a 2005 survey I replicate the experiment and collect new measures with which to test expectations. I find no significant shift in PID, and provisional support for the Affective Intelligence explanation. The results validate Burden and Klofstad's measure, qualify their findings, and test the application of the theory of Affective Intelligence to party dispositions. Alternative explanations and directions for further research are discussed. [source]