Displaying all 13 Publications
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Do local unemployment rates modify the effect of individual labour market status on psychological distress?
Ellen Flint, Nicola Shelton, Mel Bartley, et al.
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Adjusting for selection bias in longitudinal analyses using simultaneous equations modeling: the relationship between employment transitions and mental health
Fiona Steele, R. French, and Mel Bartley
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Do labour market status transitions predict changes in psychological well-being?
Ellen Flint, Mel Bartley, Nicola Shelton, et al.
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Investigating the effects of labour market position on minor psychiatric morbidity across the business cycle: longitudinal analysis of the British Household Panel Survey, 1991–2007 -conference paper abstract-
E. Flint, Amanda Sacker, Nicola Shelton, et al.
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Self-rated health trajectories in the United States and the United Kingdom: a comparative study
Amanda Sacker, Richard D. Wiggins, Mel Bartley, et al.
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Time and place: putting individual health into context. A multilevel analysis of the British Household Panel Survey
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Social dynamics of health inequalities: a growth curve analysis of aging and self assessed health in the British Household Panel Survey 1999-2001
Amanda Sacker, Paul Clarke, R.D. Wiggins, et al.
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Who you live with and where you live: setting the context for health using multiple membership multilevel models
Tarani Chandola, Paul Clarke, Richard D. Wiggins, et al.
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Socio-demographic predictors of quitting smoking: how important are household factors?
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Employment status, employment conditions, and limiting illness: prospective evidence from the British Household Panel Survey 1991-2001
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Social position and minor psychiatric morbidity over time in the British Household Panel Survey 1991-1998
R.D. Wiggins, P. Schofield, Amanda Sacker, et al.
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Social inequalities in health by individual and household measures of social position in a cohort of healthy people
Tarani Chandola, Mel Bartley, R. Wiggins, et al.
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Making sense of symptom checklists: a latent class approach to the 9 years of the British Household Panel Study
Amanda Sacker, R.D. Wiggins, Paul Clarke, et al.