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Published in: International Journal of Public Health 6/2015

01-09-2015 | Editorial

Life course research: new opportunities for establishing social and biological plausibility

Authors: Michelle Kelly-Irving, Silke Tophoven, David Blane

Published in: International Journal of Public Health | Issue 6/2015

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Excerpt

Life course research on health and disease has reached a new stage in exploring the social-to-biological transition. Large longitudinal datasets containing sociodemographic and socioeconomic characteristics, self-reported health assessments, psychological and biological data are coming into maturation and being made available to researchers. Some examples are the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), the UK Household longitudinal study (Understanding Society), The Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA), and linked registry data sets (particularly in Scandinavia). Consequently, questions around how environmental factors (in the broadest sense including social, psychosocial, behavioural, physical, etc.) lead to biological alterations over time can now be investigated on a wider scale, and in a variety of contexts and disciplines. Such work might also lead to a better understanding of the social structure of such social-to-biological mechanisms across the life course. …
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Metadata
Title
Life course research: new opportunities for establishing social and biological plausibility
Authors
Michelle Kelly-Irving
Silke Tophoven
David Blane
Publication date
01-09-2015
Publisher
Springer Basel
Published in
International Journal of Public Health / Issue 6/2015
Print ISSN: 1661-8556
Electronic ISSN: 1661-8564
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00038-015-0688-5

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