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Child disability, parental self-rated health and food security: a multivariate cross-sectional analysis

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Child disability, parental self-rated health and food security: a multivariate cross-sectional analysis. / Shahtahmasebi, Said; Emerson, Eric; Berridge, Damon et al.
In: International Journal on Disability and Human Development, Vol. 8, No. 4, 2009, p. 417-434.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Shahtahmasebi S, Emerson E, Berridge D, Lancaster G. Child disability, parental self-rated health and food security: a multivariate cross-sectional analysis. International Journal on Disability and Human Development. 2009;8(4):417-434. doi: 10.1515/IJDHD.2009.8.4.417

Author

Shahtahmasebi, Said ; Emerson, Eric ; Berridge, Damon et al. / Child disability, parental self-rated health and food security : a multivariate cross-sectional analysis. In: International Journal on Disability and Human Development. 2009 ; Vol. 8, No. 4. pp. 417-434.

Bibtex

@article{203e5464939e475d8193ebc41575f2bb,
title = "Child disability, parental self-rated health and food security: a multivariate cross-sectional analysis",
abstract = "The literature on child disability reports differentials in health and socio-economic outcomes between families with child disability and families without child disability. Often based on bivariate or descriptive multivariate analysis of survey data the relationship between child disability, health and poverty is extended to other social and health outcomes such as stress, mental health. In this paper, these relationships are re-examined within a statistical modelling framework. In other words, in examining the relationship between health outcomes and child disability the modelling process allows control for other variables. In particular, three models are fitted to a large secondary data set for the three outcomes, health, poverty, and child disability. This approach can be very instructive in an exploratory study in identifying spurious relationships. The results suggest that after controlling for multicollinearity far fewer variables appear to be associated with health, child disability and food security outcomes; child disability appears to be related to health or food security but health or food security do not appear to be related to child disability i.e. none of the child disability variables appeared significant in model of health or poverty. Furthermore, the analysis highlights complex inter-relationships in data possibly due to the dynamic nature of these processes and the definition and measurement of these outcomes. ",
author = "Said Shahtahmasebi and Eric Emerson and Damon Berridge and Gillian Lancaster",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1515/IJDHD.2009.8.4.417",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
pages = "417--434",
journal = "International Journal on Disability and Human Development",
issn = "2191-0367",
publisher = "Freund Publishing House Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Child disability, parental self-rated health and food security

T2 - a multivariate cross-sectional analysis

AU - Shahtahmasebi, Said

AU - Emerson, Eric

AU - Berridge, Damon

AU - Lancaster, Gillian

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - The literature on child disability reports differentials in health and socio-economic outcomes between families with child disability and families without child disability. Often based on bivariate or descriptive multivariate analysis of survey data the relationship between child disability, health and poverty is extended to other social and health outcomes such as stress, mental health. In this paper, these relationships are re-examined within a statistical modelling framework. In other words, in examining the relationship between health outcomes and child disability the modelling process allows control for other variables. In particular, three models are fitted to a large secondary data set for the three outcomes, health, poverty, and child disability. This approach can be very instructive in an exploratory study in identifying spurious relationships. The results suggest that after controlling for multicollinearity far fewer variables appear to be associated with health, child disability and food security outcomes; child disability appears to be related to health or food security but health or food security do not appear to be related to child disability i.e. none of the child disability variables appeared significant in model of health or poverty. Furthermore, the analysis highlights complex inter-relationships in data possibly due to the dynamic nature of these processes and the definition and measurement of these outcomes.

AB - The literature on child disability reports differentials in health and socio-economic outcomes between families with child disability and families without child disability. Often based on bivariate or descriptive multivariate analysis of survey data the relationship between child disability, health and poverty is extended to other social and health outcomes such as stress, mental health. In this paper, these relationships are re-examined within a statistical modelling framework. In other words, in examining the relationship between health outcomes and child disability the modelling process allows control for other variables. In particular, three models are fitted to a large secondary data set for the three outcomes, health, poverty, and child disability. This approach can be very instructive in an exploratory study in identifying spurious relationships. The results suggest that after controlling for multicollinearity far fewer variables appear to be associated with health, child disability and food security outcomes; child disability appears to be related to health or food security but health or food security do not appear to be related to child disability i.e. none of the child disability variables appeared significant in model of health or poverty. Furthermore, the analysis highlights complex inter-relationships in data possibly due to the dynamic nature of these processes and the definition and measurement of these outcomes.

U2 - 10.1515/IJDHD.2009.8.4.417

DO - 10.1515/IJDHD.2009.8.4.417

M3 - Journal article

VL - 8

SP - 417

EP - 434

JO - International Journal on Disability and Human Development

JF - International Journal on Disability and Human Development

SN - 2191-0367

IS - 4

ER -