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Christina Schnohr
Researcher at University of Copenhagen
Publications - 46
Citations - 2181
Christina Schnohr is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Socioeconomic status. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 45 publications receiving 1817 citations. Previous affiliations of Christina Schnohr include Panum Institute.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study: methodological developments and current tensions
Chris Roberts,John G. Freeman,Oddrun Samdal,Christina Schnohr,M.E. de Looze,S Nic Gabhainn,Ronald J. Iannotti,Mette Rasmussen +7 more
TL;DR: The structure of the HBSC network and its long-term experience in working through such challenges renders it likely that HBSS can provide a model of other similar studies facing these tensions, and four tensions likely to be present in upcoming survey cycles are identified.
Journal ArticleDOI
Psychometric Validation of the Revised Family Affluence Scale: a Latent Variable Approach
Torbjørn Torsheim,Franco Cavallo,Kate Ann Levin,Christina Schnohr,Joanna Mazur,Birgit Niclasen,Candace Currie +6 more
TL;DR: Findings support a revision to six items in the family affluence scale, and three of the six items were invariant across countries, thus anchoring the scale to a common metric across countries.
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Measuring mental health and well-being of school-children in 15 European countries using the KIDSCREEN-10 Index.
Michael Erhart,Veronika Ottova,Tanja Gaspar,Helena Jericek,Christina Schnohr,Mujgan Alikasifoglu,Antony Morgan,Ulrike Ravens-Sieberer +7 more
TL;DR: The KIDSCREEN-10 displayed good psychometric properties and measured differences between countries, age, gender, SES, and health complaints comply with theoretical considerations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Does educational level influence the effects of smoking, alcohol, physical activity, and obesity on mortality? A prospective population study
Christina Schnohr,Lise Højbjerre,Mette Riegels,Luise Ledet,Tine Steen Larsen,Kirsten Schultz-Larsen,Liselotte Petersen,Eva Prescott,Morten Grønbæk +8 more
TL;DR: The difference in distribution of the main known risk factors may be part of the explanation for the differences in mortality risk, however, these risk factors seem to influence mortality equally at different educational levels.
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Screen-based activities and physical complaints among adolescents from the Nordic countries
Torbjørn Torsheim,Lilly Eriksson,Christina Schnohr,Fredrik R. Hansen,Thoroddur Bjarnason,Raili Välimaa +5 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that time spent on screen-based activity is a contributing factor to physical complaints among young people, and that effects accumulate across different types of screen- based activities.