The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) is a longitudinal study of a nationally representative sample of adolescents in grades 7-12 in the United States in 1994-95 who have been followed through adolescence and the transition to adulthood with three in-home interviews. This application for a continuation of the Add Health Program Project takes this study in new directions by increasing our understanding of biology in relation to social, behavioral, psychological, and environmental processes of human development. We propose to conduct a fourth follow-up interview with the Add Health cohort in 2006-07 when survey respondents will be aged 23-31, and propose a set of analysis subprojects that represent an interdisciplinary research program entitled """"""""Add Health Wave IV: Social, Behavioral, and Biological Linkages."""""""" The theme of our research program is to understand how adolescent and early adulthood experiences, behaviors, and social contexts influence veil-being in young adulthood using an integrative approach that combines social, behavioral, and biomedical sciences in its research design, objectives, questions, data collection, and analysis. In Wave IV we will collect longitudinal survey data on the social, economic, psychological, and health circumstances of our respondents, longitudinal geographic data, and new biological data to capture the prevailing health concerns of our Add Health cohort as well as biological markers of future chronic health conditions. We employ innovations in the collection of biological measures in a field setting on a large national sample that are both practical and groundbreaking. The combination of longitudinal social, behavioral, and environmental data with new biological data will expand the breadth of research questions that can be addressed in Add Health. Program Project investigators have proposed significant new research on predisease pathways, gene-environment interactions, the relationship between personal ties and health, factors that contribute to resilience and wellness, the development of healthy relationships, and environmental sources of health disparities. With Wave IV, Add Health will provide the research community with a broad new set of opportunities to pursue interdisciplinary science, influence social and health policy, and improve the health and well-being of young people. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
3P01HD031921-11A1S1
Application #
7294113
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Bachrach, Christine
Project Start
1997-03-01
Project End
2010-10-31
Budget Start
2006-01-01
Budget End
2006-12-31
Support Year
11
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$12,927
Indirect Cost
Name
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Department
Social Sciences
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
608195277
City
Chapel Hill
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27599
Martin, Molly A; Lippert, Adam M; Chandler, Kelly D et al. (2018) Does mothers' employment affect adolescents' weight and activity levels? Improving our empirical estimates. SSM Popul Health 4:291-300
Crookes, Danielle M; Demmer, Ryan T; Keyes, Katherine M et al. (2018) Depressive Symptoms, Antidepressant Use, and Hypertension in Young Adulthood. Epidemiology 29:547-555
Cochran, Joshua C; Siennick, Sonja E; Mears, Daniel P (2018) Social Exclusion and Parental Incarceration Impacts on Adolescents' Networks and School Engagement. J Marriage Fam 80:478-498
Kim, Jinho (2018) Beyond the trigger: The mental health consequences of in-home firearm access among children of gun owners. Soc Sci Med 203:51-59
de la Vega, RocĂ­o; Groenewald, Cornelius; Bromberg, Maggie H et al. (2018) Chronic pain prevalence and associated factors in adolescents with and without physical disabilities. Dev Med Child Neurol 60:596-601
Eitle, David; Eitle, Tamela McNulty (2018) Obesity, Overweightness, and Depressive Symptomology Among American Indian Youth. J Racial Ethn Health Disparities 5:1305-1314
Domingue, Benjamin W; Belsky, Daniel W; Fletcher, Jason M et al. (2018) The social genome of friends and schoolmates in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:702-707
Jeanne, Thomas L; Hooker, Elizabeth R; Nguyen, Thuan et al. (2018) High birth weight modifies association between adolescent physical activity and cardiometabolic health in women and not men. Prev Med 108:29-35
Fish, Jessica N; Pollitt, Amanda M; Schulenberg, John E et al. (2018) Measuring alcohol use across the transition to adulthood: Racial/ethnic, sexual identity, and educational differences. Addict Behav 77:193-202
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin; Hayford, Sarah R (2018) Adolescent Reproductive and Contraceptive Knowledge and Attitudes and Adult Contraceptive Behavior. Matern Child Health J 22:32-40

Showing the most recent 10 out of 1305 publications