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Results Found: 38
  • Maternal Lifestyle Study in Four Sites in the United States, 1993-2011
    WSU Dataset

    Alternate Title(s)
    MLS
    Authors
    Seetha Shankaran
    Description

    The Maternal Lifestyle Study (MLS) was the largest of the NIH longitudinal studies of children with prenatal cocaine exposure (PCE). MLS was a longitudinal multi-site observational study of the long-term effects of in-utero exposure to cocaine on child development. MLS was conducted at four geographically diverse, collaborating university centers (Wayne State University, University of Tennessee at Memphis, University of Miami, and Brown University). Participants were identified during the newborn period while in the hospital. The MLS began enrollment of a longitudinal birth cohort of 1,388 infant/mother dyads in 1993. Subjects in the follow-up were seen from 1 month of age through 16 years of age. The overall purpose of the study was to investigate the effects of drug use during pregnancy on acute neonatal events and long-term physical health, social, behavioral and neurodevelopmental outcomes.

    Subject
    Medicine & Health
    Geographic Coverage
    United States
    Timeframe
    1993 - 2011
    Access Rights
    Application required
  • Evaluation of Victim Advocacy Services for Battered Women in Detroit, 1998-1999
    WSU Dataset

    Authors
    Arlene Weisz
    Description

    This study evaluated advocacy services offered to battered women in Detroit, Michigan, and examined other aspects of coordinated community responses to domestic violence by focusing on women named as victims in police reports. Advocacy was defined as those services provided to support victims during the legal process or to enhance their safety. For the Preliminary Complaint Reports Data (Part 1), a random sample of preliminary complaint reports (PCRs), completed by police officers after they responded to domestic violence calls, were gathered, resulting in a sample of 1,057 incidents and victims. For Victim Advocacy Contact Data (Part 2), researchers obtained data from advocates' files about the services they provided to the 1,057 victims. For Case Disposition Data (Part 3), researchers conducted a computer search to determine the outcomes of the cases. They looked up each perpetrator from the list of 1,057 incidents, and determined whether there was a warrant for the focal incident, whether it turned into a prosecution, and the outcome. The Initial Victim Interview (Part 4) and Follow-Up Victim Interview Data (Part 5) were conducted from April 1998 to July 1999. During the same period that researchers were completing the second interviews, they also interviewed 23 women (Victim Comparison Group Interview Data, Part 6) from the list of 1,057 whom they had been unable to reach during the first interviews. They compared these 23 women to the 63 who had second interviews to determine if there were any differences in use of services, or views toward or participation in prosecution. Variables in Part 1 focus on whether alcohol and abuse were involved, previous incidents, the suspect's psychological aggressions and physical assaults, if a weapon was used, if the victim was hurt, if property was damaged, if the victim sought medical attention, and the severity of physical abuse or injury. Variables in Part 2 provide information on the role of the advocate, methods of contact, types of referrals made, and services provided. Variables in Part 3 include the type of charge, outcome of resolved case, why the case was dismissed, if applicable, and if the suspect was sentenced to probation, costs, confinement, no contact with the victim, a batterer program, or community service. [...]

    Subject
    Sociology
    Geographic Coverage
    Detroit, Michigan
    Timeframe
    1998 - 1999
    Access Rights
    Application required
  • National Politics Study, 2004
    WSU Dataset

    Alternate Title(s)
    NPS
    Authors
    Ronald Brown
    Description

    The primary goal of the National Politics Study (NPS) was to gather comparative data about individuals' political attitudes, beliefs, aspirations, and behaviors at the beginning of the 21st century. Exploring the nature of political involvement and participation among individuals from different racial and ethnic groups, the survey included questions about voting preferences, party affiliation, organizational membership, immigration, racial consciousness, acculturation, and views of government policies.

    Subject
    Political Science
    Geographic Coverage
    United States
    Timeframe
    2004 - 2005
    Access Rights
    Available to ICPSR member institutions
  • National Black Politics Study, 1993
    WSU Dataset

    Authors
    Ronald Brown
    Description

    This study was designed to provide information on attitudes and opinions regarding a number of issues of importance to Black Americans. Topics included the performance of President Bill Clinton, the economic condition of Black Americans, and what respondents thought ought to be done to improve the condition of Black people. Questions regarding Black women and their role in the Black community were also asked. In addition, the role and extent of religion in Black politics was investigated. Respondents also provided information about their political self-identification and their community and political involvement, as well as their feelings toward various political leaders, political groups, and national policies. Demographic information on respondents includes sex, age, education, marital status, income, and occupation and industry.

    Subject
    Political Science
    Geographic Coverage
    United States
    Timeframe
    1993 - 1993
    Access Rights
    Available to ICPSR member institutions
  • Detroit Mother-Daughter Communication Patterns, 1978
    WSU Dataset

    Authors
    Greer L. Fox
    Description

    The goal of this study was to investigate the influence of female parents on the sexual and contraceptive behavior of teenage daughters. The strategy for doing so was to examine patterns of communication about sex roles and sexual behavior between mothers and daughters in different types of families and to measure the impact of varying communication patterns on the sexual and contraceptive knowledge and behavior of daughters. Demographic, attitudinal, and behavioral data were collected from both mothers and daughters in Detroit, Michigan, in separate but simultaneous face-to-face interviews.

    Subject
    Medicine & Health
    Sociology
    Geographic Coverage
    Detroit, Michigan
    Timeframe
    1978 - 1978
    Access Rights
    Application required
    Free to all
  • American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric® Participant Use Data File

    Alternate Title(s)
    ACS NSQIP PUF
    Description

    The Pediatric Participant Use Data File (PUF) is a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)-compliant data file containing cases submitted to the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric® (ACS NSQIP Pediatric®). The PUF contains patient-level, aggregate data and does not identify hospitals, health care providers, or patients. The ACS NSQIP Pediatric collects data on approximately 120 variables, including preoperative risk factors, intraoperative variables, and 30-day postoperative mortality and morbidity outcomes for patients undergoing major surgical procedures in both the inpatient and outpatient setting. The intended purpose of this file is to provide researchers at participating sites with a data resource they can use to investigate and advance the quality of care delivered to the surgical patient through the analysis of cases captured by ACS NSQIP Pediatric. Additional procedure-specific PUFs are available for appendectomy, spinal fusion, and cerebrospinal fluid shunt.

    Subject
    Medicine & Health
    Geographic Coverage
    United States
    Timeframe
    2012 - Present
    Access Rights
    Application required
  • National Survey of American Life, 2001-2003

    Alternate Title(s)
    NSAL
    Authors
    Margarita Alegria
    James S. Jackson
    Ronald C. Kessler
    David Takeuchi
    Description

    The National Survey of American Life (NSAL) is a study designed to explore racial and ethnic differences in mental disorders, psychological distress, and informal and formal service use from within the context of a variety of presumed risk and protective factors in the African-American and Afro-Caribbean populations of the United States as compared with White respondents living in the same communities. The NSAL is part of the Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys (CPES) data collection.

    Subject
    Medicine & Health
    Sociology
    Geographic Coverage
    United States
    Timeframe
    2001 - 2003
    Access Rights
    Application required
    Free to all
    Local Expert
    R. Khari Brown
  • Data from: Who's Talking about Scholarly Communication? An Examination of Gender and Behavior on the SCHOLCOMM Listserv
    WSU Dataset

    Authors
    Clayton Hayes
    Heidi Elaine Kelly
    Description

    Data gathered from the American Library Association SCHOLCOMM Listerv on gendered responses to listserv inquiries. Data includes gender, count, replies, nonreplies, and replied between male and female listserv members.

    Subject
    Library & Information Science
    Geographic Coverage
    North America
    Timeframe
    2013 - 2015
    Access Rights
    Free to all
  • Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker

    Alternate Title(s)
    OxCGRT
    Authors
    Thomas Hale
    Sam Webster
    Description

    The OxCGRT systematically collects information on several different common policy responses national governments have taken in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, scores the stringency of such measures, and aggregates these scores into a common Stringency Index. Eleven indicators of government response are provided; seven indicators are policies such as school closures and travel bans, and four are financial indicators such as fiscal or monetary measures. Data are collected from public sources by a team of dozens of Oxford University students and staff from every part of the world.

    Subject
    COVID-19
    Law
    Medicine & Health
    Geographic Coverage
    International
    Timeframe
    2020 - Present
    Access Rights
    Free to all
  • Coronavirus (Covid-19) Data in the United States

    Description

    The New York Times is releasing a series of data files with cumulative counts of coronavirus cases in the United States, at the state and county level, over time. They are compiling this time series data from state and local governments and health departments in an attempt to provide a complete record of the ongoing outbreak. They have used these data to power their maps and reporting tracking the outbreak, and they are now being made available to the public in response to requests from researchers, scientists, and government officials who would like access to the data to better understand the outbreak. The data begins with the first reported coronavirus case in Washington State on Jan. 21, 2020. They will publish regular updates to the data in this repository.

    Subject
    COVID-19
    Medicine & Health
    Geographic Coverage
    United States
    Timeframe
    2020 - Present
    Access Rights
    Free to all