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Exploring Health Effects of Terrorism: A Multi-Level Analysis for Turkey

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Exploring Health Effects of Terrorism: A Multi-Level Analysis for Turkey. / Köse, Tekin; Oymak, Cansu.
In: International Journal of Conflict and Violence , Vol. 13, 25.04.2019.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Köse T, Oymak C. Exploring Health Effects of Terrorism: A Multi-Level Analysis for Turkey. International Journal of Conflict and Violence . 2019 Apr 25;13. doi: 10.4119/ijcv-3120

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Köse, Tekin ; Oymak, Cansu. / Exploring Health Effects of Terrorism : A Multi-Level Analysis for Turkey. In: International Journal of Conflict and Violence . 2019 ; Vol. 13.

Bibtex

@article{49cac59cb6e64064b37f2cbf92fb16a6,
title = "Exploring Health Effects of Terrorism: A Multi-Level Analysis for Turkey",
abstract = "Terrorism has the potential to affect population health through various pathways. Since the literature mostly analyzes tangible economic costs, there is dearth of evidence on health effects of terrorism. In an effort to address that gap, this article explores the relationship between terrorism and health satisfaction of Turkish citizens by combining province-level and individual-level data sets. In order to quantify determinants of health satisfaction, a multi-level modeling framework is employed. Empirical analysis suggests that individuals with higher exposure to terrorism are more likely to report lower health satisfaction in Turkey. Health satisfaction of individuals is significantly and positively correlated with individual-level covariates such as education level, marital status, employment status, household income, housing floor area per person, interest in health issues and becoming a parent within the past year. Age, being female and utilization of health services display negative associations with health satisfaction of individuals. Finally, province level GDP per capita and schooling ratio exhibit significantly positive associations with individual health satisfaction in Turkey.",
author = "Tekin K{\"o}se and Cansu Oymak",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "25",
doi = "10.4119/ijcv-3120",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "International Journal of Conflict and Violence ",
issn = "1864-1385",
publisher = "University of Bielefeld",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring Health Effects of Terrorism

T2 - A Multi-Level Analysis for Turkey

AU - Köse, Tekin

AU - Oymak, Cansu

PY - 2019/4/25

Y1 - 2019/4/25

N2 - Terrorism has the potential to affect population health through various pathways. Since the literature mostly analyzes tangible economic costs, there is dearth of evidence on health effects of terrorism. In an effort to address that gap, this article explores the relationship between terrorism and health satisfaction of Turkish citizens by combining province-level and individual-level data sets. In order to quantify determinants of health satisfaction, a multi-level modeling framework is employed. Empirical analysis suggests that individuals with higher exposure to terrorism are more likely to report lower health satisfaction in Turkey. Health satisfaction of individuals is significantly and positively correlated with individual-level covariates such as education level, marital status, employment status, household income, housing floor area per person, interest in health issues and becoming a parent within the past year. Age, being female and utilization of health services display negative associations with health satisfaction of individuals. Finally, province level GDP per capita and schooling ratio exhibit significantly positive associations with individual health satisfaction in Turkey.

AB - Terrorism has the potential to affect population health through various pathways. Since the literature mostly analyzes tangible economic costs, there is dearth of evidence on health effects of terrorism. In an effort to address that gap, this article explores the relationship between terrorism and health satisfaction of Turkish citizens by combining province-level and individual-level data sets. In order to quantify determinants of health satisfaction, a multi-level modeling framework is employed. Empirical analysis suggests that individuals with higher exposure to terrorism are more likely to report lower health satisfaction in Turkey. Health satisfaction of individuals is significantly and positively correlated with individual-level covariates such as education level, marital status, employment status, household income, housing floor area per person, interest in health issues and becoming a parent within the past year. Age, being female and utilization of health services display negative associations with health satisfaction of individuals. Finally, province level GDP per capita and schooling ratio exhibit significantly positive associations with individual health satisfaction in Turkey.

U2 - 10.4119/ijcv-3120

DO - 10.4119/ijcv-3120

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

JO - International Journal of Conflict and Violence

JF - International Journal of Conflict and Violence

SN - 1864-1385

ER -