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Athina Vlachantoni
Researcher at University of Southampton
Publications - 110
Citations - 1684
Athina Vlachantoni is an academic researcher from University of Southampton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pension & Population. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 97 publications receiving 1246 citations. Previous affiliations of Athina Vlachantoni include Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.
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Marital status, health and mortality
TL;DR: It is argued that in order to fully account for changes inLiving arrangements as a determinant of health and mortality transitions, future research will increasingly need to consider a longer perspective and take into account transitions in living arrangements throughout an individual's life course rather than simply focussing at one stage of the life course.
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Ethnic inequalities in limiting health and self-reported health in later life revisited
TL;DR: Older people from ethnic minorities report poorer health outcomes even after controlling for social and economic disadvantages, reflecting the complexity of health inequalities among different ethnic groups in the UK.
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Measuring unmet need for social care amongst older people
Athina Vlachantoni,Richard J. Shaw,Rosalind Willis,Maria Evandrou,Jane Falkingham,Rebekah Luff +5 more
TL;DR: The results show that different kinds of need tend to be supported by particular sources of care, and that there is a significant level of ‘unmet need’ for certain activities.
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An ‘undeliberate determinacy’? The changing migration strategies of Polish migrants in the UK in times of Brexit
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the factors behind Polish migrants' migration strategies, and argue that basic socioeconomic and demographic factors are inadequate, on their own terms, to explain future migration and civic integration plans.
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The determinants of receiving social care in later life in England.
TL;DR: The research shows that different kinds of impediments in everyday life are associated with receiving support from different sources and this ‘link’ between particular types of difficulties and support receipt from particular sources raises questions about the way social care provision can or should be organised in the future.