CSDE NEWS & EVENTS

June 17, 2024

CSDE Research & Highlights

Zhao, Berridge, Mroz, and Colleagues Study the Role of Care Partners in Managing Fall Risk

CSDE Affiliates Clara Berridge (Social Work) and Tracy Mroz (Rehabilitation Medicine) released an article with colleagues, led by Yuanjin Zhou (Social Welfare PhD ’21), now an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of Social Work. The article is published in the The Gerontologist and titled “Care partners’ engagement in preventing falls for community-dwelling older people with dementia“. Little is known about how to prevent falls in community-dwelling older people with dementia. Although their care partners adopt various behaviors to prevent their falls, it is unclear if these behaviors reduce falls for those with different levels of fall risk.  This study uses data over time to examine how care partners' fall risk management (FRM) behaviors are associated with fall risk. The different impacts of dementia care partners' FRM behaviors emphasize the need to address specific behaviors when involving care partners in preventing falls for older people with dementia at varying levels of fall risk.

(read more)

Photos of Zhao, Berridge, and Mroz


New Study by Jones-Smith, Knox, Godwin, and Co-authors Evaluates Seattle’s Sweetened Beverage Tax and Changes in Children’s Body Mass Index

CSDE Affiliates Jessica Jones-Smith (Health Systems and Population Health, Epidemiology), Melissa Knox (Economics), and CSDE Demographer Jessica Godwin released an article with co-authors in JAMA Network Open, titled “Sweetened Beverage Tax Implementation and Change in Body Mass Index Among Children in Seattle“. This study sought to evaluate the association between the Seattle sweetened beverage tax and change in body mass index (BMI) among children. In this cohort study of 6313 children living in Seattle or a nearby comparison area, a statistically significant reduction in BMI was observed for children in Seattle after the implementation of a sweetened beverage tax compared with well-matched children living in nontaxed comparison areas. These results suggest that the sweetened beverage tax in Seattle may be associated with a small but reasonable reduction in BMI among children living within the Seattle city limits.

(read more)

Photos of Jones-Smith, Knox, and Godwin


Tier 3 PHI Grant Awarded to Romich, Ayala, Sederbaum, and colleagues

CSDE Affiliates Jennie Romich (Social Work), CSDE research scientist Sofia Ayala, CSDE Trainee Izzy Sederbaum (Public Policy & Governance), and colleague Santino Camacho (PhC, Social Work) were awarded a Population Health Initiative Tier 3 grant for a project, “Improving data to understand the well-being of small and excluded populations.” CSDE affiliates Scott Allard (Public Policy & Governance) and Arjee Restar (Epidemiology) along with Max Halvorson (Social Work) and Youngjun Choe (Department of Industrial & Systems Engineering) will serve as advisors to the project. Research data often renders small populations invisible. This project focuses on two populations who are rarely included and identified in sufficient numbers for group analysis in either general population surveys or administrative data, transgender (trans) people and Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders (NHPI). This project will establish community-informed methods and practices for identifying trans and NHPI populations within Washington State administrative data.

(read more)

Photos of Romich, Ayala, Allard, Restar, and Sederbaum


Almquist, McCormick, Hagopian, Yang, and Colleagues Receive a Tier 3 PHI Grant

CSDE affiliates Zack Almquist (Sociology), Tyler McCormick (Sociology), Amy Hagopian (Health Systems and Population Health), and Juhne Yang (CSDE, eScience Institute) along with Paul Hebert (Health Systems and Population Health, VA Health Services) and KCRHA community members, received a Population Health Initiative Tier 3 grant to extend a novel method they introduced for counting unsheltered people experiencing homelessness through a social network (peer-referral) method, respondent-driven sampling (RDS), which allows for creating a population-representative survey for understanding the needs, demographics, and size of the unsheltered population in King County. This team of researchers and community partners proposed in the PHI grant to extend this RDS method to allow quarterly surveying of this vulnerable population. Quarterly surveys will provide an entirely novel seasonal enumeration of the unsheltered population and facilitate the timely collection of new survey instruments relevant to changing conditions in the community.

(read more)

Photos of Almquist, McCormick, Hagopian, and Yang


Jenness and Co-authors Study Social Contact Networks in an Urban Jail to Understand Infectious Disease Transmission

CSDE Affiliate Samuel Jenness (Epidemiology, Emory University) authored research with colleagues in Epidemics, titled “Dynamic contact networks of residents of an urban jail in the era of SARS-CoV-2“. In custodial settings such as jails and prisons, infectious disease transmission is heightened by factors such as overcrowding and limited healthcare access. Specific features of social contact networks within these settings have not been sufficiently characterized, especially in the context of a large-scale respiratory infectious disease outbreak. The study aims to quantify contact network dynamics within the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta, Georgia.

(read more)

Samuel Jenness


Updates from the CSDE Research & Training Cores

*New* Issue of Demography

Read volume 61, issue 3 here!

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*New* NCER Hosts Virtual Office Hours for Grant Applicants (Multiple sessions in June-July)

The National Center for Education Research (NCER) is hosting virtual office hours for applicants interested in applying to the Education Research Grants (84.305A), Using Longitudinal Data to Support State Education Policymaking (84.305S), and Transformative Research in the Education Sciences Grants (84.305T) programs. To see the schedule of office hours and to request additional information, visit the Virtual Office Hours page.

(read more)



*New* PRB Book Talk: How Women Became America’s Safety Net (6/27/24)

Join the Population Reference Bureau for a Book Talk on Holding It Together: How Women Became America’s Safety Net with author and sociologist Jessica Calarco. The virtual talk will occur on June 27th at 9:00am (PST) (register here). In Holding It Together, Calarco (University of Wisconsin-Madison) draws on five years of research to show how U.S. society and policy disproportionately burden women with caregiving responsibilities.

(read more)



*New* Register for IAPHS’ Mentorship Program (Due 7/8/2024)

The Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science (IAPHS) has opened registration for mentors and mentees in its mentorship program. The IAPHS Mentoring Program matches individuals who could use advice and guidance on building their careers with more experienced population health scientists willing to lend a helping hand. Register by July 8th!

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CSDE Population Research Planning Grants (PRPGs) (Rolling deadline)

Population Research Planning Grants (PRPGs) are designed to provide in-kind support and/or funds of up to $25k* to support a wide array of activity types throughout the development of a research project. As part of our mission to complement rather than duplicate other campus opportunities such as the Population Health Initiative seed grants, we will consider funding things activities such as:

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CSDE Matching Support to Supplement On-campus Funding (Rolling deadline)

CSDE Matching Support includes in-kind or monetary support to accompany a submission to other on-campus funding mechanism, such as PHI, EarthLab, or Urban@UW. All projects must have a CSDE affiliate who is UW faculty and is listed as a PI or co-PI, with any number of other collaborators. Note that we require (PRPGs) or strongly suggest (matching funds) contacting either Development Core Director (Steven Goodreau) or CSDE Director (Sara Curran) to discuss possibilities for your specific proposal before submission.

(read more)



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CSDE
Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology
csde@uw.edu
206 Raitt Hall
(206) 616-7743
UW Box 353412
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98195-3412
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