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Christina Mair

Researcher at University of Pittsburgh

Publications -  107
Citations -  5798

Christina Mair is an academic researcher from University of Pittsburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 88 publications receiving 4718 citations. Previous affiliations of Christina Mair include University of California & Pacific Institute.

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Neighborhoods and health.

TL;DR: This chapter summarizes key work in this area with a particular focus on chronic disease outcomes (specifically obesity and related risk factors) and mental health ( specifically depression and depressive symptoms) and empirical work is classified into two main eras.
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Are neighbourhood characteristics associated with depressive symptoms? A review of evidence

TL;DR: Improving the quality of observational work through improved measurement of neighbourhood attributes, more sophisticated consideration of spatial scale, longitudinal designs and evaluation of natural experiments will strengthen inferences regarding causal effects of area attributes on depression.
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A Review of Spatial Methods in Epidemiology, 2000–2010

TL;DR: The huge growth in spatial epidemiology is documented, the tools that have been employed are summarized, and emerging areas that are likely to be important to future spatial analysis in public health are noted.
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Prevalence of Past-Year Sexual Assault Victimization Among Undergraduate Students: Exploring Differences by and Intersections of Gender Identity, Sexual Identity, and Race/Ethnicity

TL;DR: Empirical research and interventions should consider intersections of gender identity, sexual identity, and race/ethnicity to better tailor sexual assault prevention and treatment for college students.
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Neighborhood stressors and social support as predictors of depressive symptoms in the Chicago Community Adult Health Study

TL;DR: Both neighborhood stressors and social support are associated with depressive symptoms, and most social support variables were associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms in women but not men, while stressors were moderately associated with higher levels in all subjects.