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Jonathan Daw

Researcher at Pennsylvania State University

Publications -  43
Citations -  880

Jonathan Daw is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Educational attainment & Population. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 38 publications receiving 615 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan Daw include University of Colorado Boulder & University of Alabama at Birmingham.

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Tracking the reach of COVID-19 kin loss with a bereavement multiplier applied to the United States.

TL;DR: The bereavement multiplier is a useful indicator for tracking COVID-19’s multiplicative impact as it reverberates across American families and can be tailored to other causes of death, and researchers can estimate the bereavement burden over the course of the epidemic in lockstep with rising death tolls.
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Defining the Environment in Gene–Environment Research: Lessons From Social Epidemiology

TL;DR: The environment is described in a multilevel, multidomain, longitudinal framework that accounts for upstream processes influencing health outcomes and illustrates the utility of this approach by describing how intermediate levels of social organization are key environmental components of G × E research.
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Emerging Adulthood, Emergent Health Lifestyles: Sociodemographic Determinants of Trajectories of Smoking, Binge Drinking, Obesity, and Sedentary Behavior.

TL;DR: It is found that health behavior trajectories cluster together in seven joint classes and that sociodemographic factors (including gender, parental education, and race-ethnicity) significantly predict membership in these joint trajectories.
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What can genes tell us about the relationship between education and health

TL;DR: Genome wide data from respondents of the Health and Retirement Study are used to evaluate the possibility that common genetic influences are associated with education and three health outcomes: depression, self-rated health, and body mass index and find no evidence that the correlation between education and BMI is influenced by common genetic factors.
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Genetic Sensitivity to Peer Behaviors: 5HTTLPR, Smoking, and Alcohol Consumption

TL;DR: It is shown that adolescents smoke more cigarettes and consume more alcohol when attending schools with elevated rates of tobacco and alcohol use and an individual’s susceptibility to school-level patterns of smoking or drinking is conditional on the number of short alleles he or she has in 5HTTLPR.