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Lorraine Halinka Malcoe

Researcher at University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

Publications -  6
Citations -  204

Lorraine Halinka Malcoe is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health equity & Race and health. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications receiving 52 citations.

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Intersectionality Research for Transgender Health Justice: A Theory-Driven Conceptual Framework for Structural Analysis of Transgender Health Inequities.

TL;DR: The authors show how IRTHJ provides tools for researchers to transform the design, implementation, and interpretation of transgender health research, and they discuss implications for programs, policy, and action for transgender health justice.
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The Legacy of Structural Racism: Associations Between Historic Redlining, Current Mortgage Lending, and Health

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined historic redlining in relation to current neighborhood lending discrimination and three key indicators of societal health (mental health, physical health, and infant mortality rate) and investigated sustained lending disinvestment as a determinant of current neighborhood health in one of the most hypersegregated metropolitan areas in the United States, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
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Exploring traditional end-of-life beliefs, values, expectations, and practices among Chinese women living in England: Informing culturally safe care.

TL;DR: Investigating end-of-life beliefs, values, practices, and expectations of a select group of harder-to-reach Chinese women living in England revealed variations between/within Eastern and Western culture that resulted in pronounced, and oftentimes gendered, differences in EoL care expectations.
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Behavioral health and social correlates of reincarceration among Hispanic, Native American, and white rural women.

TL;DR: Wraparound programs focusing on harm reduction, housing, and treatment and support services are needed for successful reentry of these underserved women.
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Intimate Partner Violence and Structural Violence in the Lives of Incarcerated Women: A Mixed-Method Study in Rural New Mexico.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted qualitative and quantitative interviews with 99 women who were scheduled to return to micropolitan or non-core areas within 6 months, and found that their experiences of intimate partner violence intersect with challenges across multiple social-ecological levels, including risky or criminalizing interpersonal relationships, geographic isolation, and persistent gender, racial, and economic inequities.