cagney cv 07 24 2016 - uchicago sociology · page 3 updated 7/24/16 other(experience(jun)89

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Updated 7/24/16 KATHLEEN A. CAGNEY The University of Chicago Department of Sociology Population Research Center 1126 East 59th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 Sociology Office: (773)8343924 PRC Office: (773)2566341 [email protected] EDUCATION 1998 Ph.D. Health Policy and Management (Health Services Research) Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health Dissertation: Race, Socioeconomic Status and Family Structure: Determinants of Longterm Care Arrangements 1990 M.P.P. Public Policy University of Chicago Irving B. Harris School of Public Policy Studies 1987 B.A. Sociology and Political Science Western Michigan University PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS Aug 11 – Present Department of Sociology, The University of Chicago Aug 99Feb 16 Department of Health Studies Mar 11Present Department of Sociology, joint appointment Jun 08 – Mar 11 Department of Sociology, faculty associate Mar 05Present Department of Comparative Human Development, faculty associate Professor. Research areas include: neighborhood social context and health; life course approaches to research in health and aging; social relationships and health; racial and ethnic differences in the utilization of medical care and longterm care; health status assessment. Jan 08 –Present Director, Population Research Center June 08Present Director, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Predoctoral and Postdoctoral Training Program (Assistant Director 0207) May 06Present Associate Director, Center on the Demography and Economics of Aging Oct 04Sept 07 CoDirector, Health Disparities and Neighborhoods Core for the Chicago Center of Excellence in Health Promotion Economics Dec 97Jul 99 Population Research Center, NORC and the University of Chicago Postdoctoral Fellow. National Institute on Aging fellowship in the Demography and Economics of Aging. Projects included: 1) an examination of the relationship between race and family structure and their impact upon longterm care use; 2) an assessment of education and wealth effects on cognitive status in later life; 3) a demographic evaluation of the feasibility of Medicare+Choice.

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Page 1: Cagney CV 07 24 2016 - UChicago Sociology · Page 3 Updated 7/24/16 OTHER(EXPERIENCE(Jun)89

Updated 7/24/16

KATHLEEN  A.  CAGNEY    

The  University  of  Chicago  Department  of  Sociology  

Population  Research  Center  1126  East  59th  Street  Chicago,  Illinois  60637  

Sociology  Office:  (773)834-­‐3924  PRC  Office:  (773)256-­‐6341  [email protected]  

 

EDUCATION  

1998   Ph.D.    Health  Policy  and  Management  (Health  Services  Research)  Johns  Hopkins  University  School  of  Hygiene  and  Public  Health  Dissertation:  Race,  Socioeconomic  Status  and  Family  Structure:    Determinants  of  Long-­‐term  Care  Arrangements  

1990 M.P.P.    Public  Policy  University  of  Chicago  Irving  B.  Harris  School  of  Public  Policy  Studies  

1987   B.A.    Sociology  and  Political  Science  Western  Michigan  University  

 

PROFESSIONAL  POSITIONS  

Aug  11  –  Present   Department  of  Sociology,  The  University  of  Chicago          Aug  99-­‐Feb  16   Department  of  Health  Studies      Mar  11-­‐Present   Department  of  Sociology,  joint  appointment      Jun  08  –  Mar  11   Department  of  Sociology,  faculty  associate        Mar  05-­‐Present   Department  of  Comparative  Human  Development,  faculty  associate  

Professor.    Research  areas  include:  neighborhood  social  context  and  health;  life  course  approaches  to  research  in  health  and  aging;  social  relationships  and  health;  racial  and  ethnic  differences  in  the  utilization  of  medical  care  and  long-­‐term  care;  health  status  assessment.      

Jan  08  –Present   Director,  Population  Research  Center  June  08-­‐Present     Director,  Agency  for  Healthcare  Research  and  Quality  (AHRQ)  Predoctoral  and  

Postdoctoral  Training  Program  (Assistant  Director  02-­‐07)  May  06-­‐Present   Associate  Director,  Center  on  the  Demography  and  Economics  of  Aging  Oct  04-­‐Sept  07   Co-­‐Director,  Health  Disparities  and  Neighborhoods  Core  for  the  Chicago  Center  of  

Excellence  in  Health  Promotion  Economics    

Dec  97-­‐Jul  99   Population  Research  Center,  NORC  and  the  University  of  Chicago  Postdoctoral  Fellow.      National  Institute  on  Aging  fellowship  in  the  Demography  and  

Economics  of  Aging.  Projects  included:  1)  an  examination  of  the  relationship  between  race  and  family  structure  and  their  impact  upon  long-­‐term  care  use;  2)  an  assessment  of  education  and  wealth  effects  on  cognitive  status  in  later  life;  3)  a  demographic  evaluation  of  the  feasibility  of  Medicare+Choice.  

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Nov  95-­‐Jan  97   Health  Services  Research  and  Development  Center,  Johns  Hopkins  University  Research  Associate.  Questionnaire  development  and  data  analysis  for  the  Survey  of  

Family  Health  Experiences  (J.  Kasper,  P.I.),  a  national  panel  study  of  health  insurance  and  access  to  care  funded  by  the  Kaiser  Family  Foundation.      

Jan  96-­‐Jan  97   Department  of  Health  Policy  and  Management,  Johns  Hopkins  University  Teaching  Assistant.  1)  Assisted  in  course  development  and  planning  for  Assessing  Health  

Status  and  Patient  Outcomes  (with  A.  Wu),  Second  Quarter,  1996/97;  2)  Conducted  a  proposal  writing  workshop  for  second  year  doctoral  students,  First  and  Second  Quarters,  1996/97;  3)  Assisted  in  course  preparation  and  management  for  Data  Sources  and  Applications  in  Health  Policy  Analysis  (with  J.  Kasper),  a  course  developed  for  the  Taiwan  Master’s  in  Public  Health  program,  Third  Quarter,  1995/96.      

 Sep  94-­‐Nov  95   Welch  Center  for  Prevention,  Epidemiology,  and  Clinical  Research,  Johns  Hopkins  

University  Research  Associate.  Development,  testing,  and  analysis  of  a  health-­‐related  quality  of  life  

instrument  for  end-­‐stage  renal  disease  patients  for  a  Patient  Outcomes  Research  Team  (PORT)  study,  Choices  for  Healthy  Outcomes  in  Caring  for  ESRD  (N.  Powe,  P.I.).    Research  Associate  (Jun  95-­‐Sep  95).    Questionnaire  development  for  the  National  Senior  Service  Demonstration  Project  (L.  Fried,  P.I.),  a  program  designed  to  foster  elder  participation  in  schools.    Included  development  of  modules  on  elderly  volunteerism  for  inclusion  in  the  Health  and  Retirement  Survey  (HRS)  and  the  Assets  and  Health  Dynamics  Survey  (AHEAD).      

 

Sep  93-­‐Aug  94   Health  Services  Research  and  Development  Center,  Johns  Hopkins  University  Research  Assistant.  Literature  review  regarding  the  impact  of  environmental  factors  on  

choices  about  long-­‐term  care  and  analyses  of  race  differences  regarding  caregiver  burden  for  Understanding  Race  Differences  in  Long-­‐term  Care  (J.  Kasper,  T.  LaVeist,  P.I.s).      

Jun  91-­‐Aug  93   Division  of  Cancer  Control,  Memorial  Sloan-­‐Kettering  Cancer  Center  Community  Program  Analyst.  Administration  and  evaluation  of  cancer  control  initiatives  

through  two  grants;  1)  Developed  methods  for  clinical  follow-­‐up  and  cost  effectiveness  analysis  and  acted  as  administrative  link  between  Memorial  Sloan-­‐Kettering  and  Harlem  Hospital  for  a  prevalence  screening  program  in  the  ER  of  Harlem  Hospital,  the  Emergency  Room  Cancer  Screening  Program  (H.  Freeman,  P.I.);    2)  Instrument  development,  administration  and  analysis  for  a  study  on  cancer  screening  knowledge,  behavior  and  access  among  ethnic  groups  in  New  York  City  for  Cancer  Control  Needs  in  Multi-­‐ethnic  Communities  (J.  Kerner,  P.I.).      

Jun  90-­‐Jun  91   Center  for  Health  Administration  Studies  (CHAS),  University  of  Chicago  Assistant  Study  Director.    Questionnaire  development,  data  analysis,  and  management  

for  the  International  Collaborative  Study  of  Oral  Health  Outcomes  (ICS  II),  an  eight  nation  study  conducted  by  CHAS  and  the  World  Health  Organization  (R.  Andersen,  P.I.).    Research  Assistant  (Oct  89-­‐Jun  90).  Secondary  data  collection  for  ICS  II.  Compiled  data  on  health,  education  and  wealth  for  the  nations  involved  in  ICS  II,  along  with  editing  research  manuscripts  and  participating  in  planning  meetings  for  data  collection  and  field  research.    

 

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OTHER  EXPERIENCE  

Jun  89-­‐Sep  89   The  Nation  Magazine,  New  York,  New  York  Writing  and  publishing  internship.  Research,  fact-­‐checking,  copy-­‐editing,  and  publishing  

tasks  for  weekly  magazine  of  political  commentary.      

Sep  87-­‐Dec  87   Institute  of  Public  Administration,  Dublin,  Ireland  Irish  studies  semester  and  legislative  internship  with  the  Irish  Parliament  (Oireachtas).    

Program  with  Trinity  College  in  Irish  politics,  literature,  and  history.      

Apr  87-­‐May  87   Inter-­‐University  Centre  for  Post-­‐Graduate  Studies,  Dubrovnik,  Yugoslavia    Seminar  “Future  of  Religion:  Culture,  Class,  and  Nation.”    

Sep  84-­‐Dec  84   Long  Island  University,  Brooklyn,  New  York  United  Nations  Semester,  National  Collegiate  Honors  Council.          

FELLOWSHIPS,  HONORS,  AND  AWARDS  

2016   Visiting  Fellow,  University  of  Texas  at  Austin  Population  Research  Center  2015   Visiting  Scholar,  University  of  Pennsylvania  2010   Visiting  Scholar,  University  of  Michigan    2009   National  Opinion  Research  Center  (NORC)  Senior  Fellow  2006   Visiting  Scholar,  Johns  Hopkins  University      2002   Brookdale  National  Leadership  in  Aging  Program  Fellowship  Finalist  1998 NIA  Technical  Assistance  Workshop  Presentation  Award  

 Johns  Hopkins  University  

1996-­‐1997 Agency  for  Health  Care  Policy  and  Research  Dissertation  Grant      1996 Marilyn  Bergner  Award  1993-­‐1995 University  Fellowship  

University  of  Chicago  1990   General  Motors  Award  for  Excellence  in  Policy  Research  1988   Knoll  Fellowship  

Western  Michigan  University  1987   Michigan  State  Colleges  and  Universities  Governing  Board  Award  

  (awarded  to  one  graduating  student  at  each  state  university)  1987   Presidential  Scholar  1987   Honors  College  graduate  1987   Summa  cum  laude  graduate  

 GRANT  SUPPORT  Awarded    Activity  Space,  Social  Interaction  and  Health  Trajectories  in  Later  Life   Principal  Investigator  Agency:    National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  1R01DA032346-­‐01       Period:  07/01/16-­‐06/30/19    We  will  examine  older  adults’  health  trajectories  in  real  time,  as  changes  unfold,  in  the  context  of  their  routine  activities.  We  not  only  concentrate  on  reports  of  network,  household,  and  neighborhood  factors  but  also  on  the  unique  role  of  GPS-­‐tracked  activity  space  coupled  with  Ecological  Momentary  Assessment  (EMA).      

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       Dental  Health  in  Community  Context:    Health  Status  and  Access  to  Care  on  Chicago’s  South  Side  Principal  Investigator  Agency:  George  E.  Richmond  Foundation    Period:    12/02/14-­‐11/30/16  This  project  examines  oral  health  status  on  Chicago’s  South  Side.    A  set  of  low-­‐income  neighborhoods  are  poised  to  undergo  rapid  social  change  due  to  the  nearby  development  of  the  Lakeside  community,  a  600-­‐acre  residential  and  commercial  space.    This  project  focuses  on  oral  health  and  its  association  with  general  health,  and  access  to  oral  health  care  services  on  the  South  Side.    It  also  explores  the  role  of  oral  health  in  labor  market  participation  and  economic  well-­‐being.        Array  of  Things  (C.  Catlett,  Co-­‐P.I.)  Co-­‐  Principal  Investigator  Agency:  National  Science  Foundation  Period:  10/10/15-­‐09/30/18  In  partnership  with  the  City  of  Chicago,  we  will  develop  and  deploy  a  persistent,  flexible  urban  scale  instrument,  called  the  Array  of  Things  (AoT),  supporting  embedded  sensing  and  cyberinfrastructure  research,  development,  and  evaluation  (500  AoT  nodes  will  be  mounted  on  streetlight  poles  throughout  the  City).  Building  on  Chicago’s  initiatives  in  open  data,  the  partnership  aims  to  create  an  “instrumented  city”  with  a  platform  that  is  driven  by  science  needs  and  can  be  continually  upgraded  over  a  number  of  years.    Health  Services  Research  Training  Program  Principal  Investigator    Agency:    Agency  for  Healthcare  Research  and  Quality  Type:  T32  HS00084     Period:  07/01/13-­‐06/30/18    This  program  for  predoctoral  and  postdoctoral  fellows  will  enable  them  to  pursue  academic  careers,  engage  in  high  quality  research,  and  provide  leadership  in  the  multidisciplinary  field  of  health  services  research.                    National  Social  Life  Health  and  Aging  Project:  Wave  3  (L.  Waite,  P.I.)  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:  National  Institute  on  Aging    Type:  R01  AG042401       Period:  06/01/13-­‐05/31/18                          The  National  Social  Life,  Health  and  Aging  Project  (NSHAP)  is  a  longitudinal  study  of  older  adults  designed  to  examine  mechanisms  by  which  social  factors  (e.g.,  intimate  relationships,  social  networks)  affect  and  are  affected  by  health.  We  seek  to  re-­‐interview  all  surviving  referent  respondents  and  Wave  2  spouses/partners  in  2015–2016  to  trace  pathways  of  health  and  mortality  for  individuals  and  intimate  partnerships  within  social  context.    Rapid  Response  Survey  on  Smart  Meter  Attitudes  (R.  Rosner,  P.I.)  Agency:  Illinois  Science  and  Energy  Innovation  Foundation  Period:  01/03/14-­‐01/03/2016  (NCE)  Our  team  at  the  University  of  Chicago,  in  partnership  with  the  National  Opinion  Research  Center  (NORC),  proposes  a  two-­‐step  process  aimed  at  eliciting  critical  information  regarding  social  attitudes  towards  smart  grids  and  smart  metering,  focusing  especially  on  the  South  and  Far  Southeast  Sides  of  the  City  of  Chicago,  in  neighborhoods  that  the  American  Community  Survey  shows  to  be  relatively  low-­‐income  and  relatively  higher  in  older  populations  and  where  smart  meter  deployment  is  slated.    An  Urban  Sciences  Research  Coordination  Network  for  Data-­‐Driven  Urban  Design  and,  Analysis  (C.  Catlett  Co-­‐P.I.)  Co-­‐Principal  Investigator    Agency:  National  Science  Foundation    Type:  1244749         Period:  10/01/12-­‐09/30/15          Researchers  recognize  the  potential  for  new  insights  and  more  effective  policy  and  planning  if  research  teams  had  the  ability  to  explore  these  data  as  an  integrated  corpus.  The  project  will  create  a  research  coordination  network  that  brings  these  communities  together  to  develop  an  integrated  research  agenda  for  an  interdisciplinary,  data-­‐driven  approach  to  urban  research,  analysis,  and  planning,  exploring  and  prototyping  methods,  processes,  tools,  and  infrastructure  necessary  to  support  such  science.  

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 Neighborhood  Characteristics  and  Cognitive  Decline  in  Older  U.S.  Adults  (R.  Shih,  P.I.)  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:  National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R01  AG043960-­‐01       Period:    09/01/12-­‐08/31/15  (NCE)  This  project  will  develop  a  national  database  of  objectively  measured  neighborhood  characteristics,  linking  these  data  with  data  on  cognitive  function  assessed  in  a  nationally  representative  sample  of  older  adults  in  the  Health  and  Retirement  Study  (HRS)  over  as  many  as  24  years  (1992-­‐2016),  and  examine  the  cross-­‐sectional  and  longitudinal  associations  between  neighborhood  characteristics  and  cognitive  function  over  time.      Social  and  Economic  Analysis  of  Demographic  Change  Principal  Investigator    Agency:    National  Institute  of  Child  Health  and  Human  Development    Type:  2R24HD051152-­‐06       Period:  07/08/10  –  06/30/15  The  Population  Research  Center  (PRC)  aims  to  foster  an  engaged,  collaborative,  multidisciplinary  intellectual  environment  for  research  in  demography  and  population  research;  to  provide  efficient  and  facilitative  research  support  services;  to  encourage  the  development  of  new  research  projects  and  research  foci  in  population  research;  and  to  facilitate  collaborative  research  and  teaching  among  scientists  working  in  population  studies.    Community  Resilience  in  the  Wake  of  Superstorm  Sandy  Co-­‐Principal  Investigator  Agency:  Rockefeller  Foundation  Period:  04/01/13-­‐11/30/14  The  AP–NORC  Center  for  Public  Affairs  Research  initiated  a  two-­‐phase  research  project  to  examine  the  impact  of  Superstorm  Sandy.  In  addition  to  providing  an  in-­‐depth  examination  of  how  individuals  and  the  region  are  coping,  the  study  also  provides  an  opportunity  to  test  measures  of  collective  efficacy,  recovery,  and  resilience.    The  study  combines  a  set  of  social  surveys,  along  with  an  in-­‐depth  assessment  of  12  neighborhoods  and  a  systematic  social  observation.        National  Social  Life,  Health,  and  Aging  Project  (L.  Waite,  P.I.)  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:    National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R01  AG030481       Period:    06/01/08  –  05/31/13    The  primary  objective  of  the  National  Social  Life,  Health  and  Aging  Project  (NSHAP)  is  to  establish  an  innovative,  high-­‐quality  dataset  for  use  by  researchers  studying  the  relationships  between  social  processes  and  health  among  older  adults.    SES  and  Age-­‐Related  Disability  in  a  Biracial  Community  (C.  Mendes  de  Leon,  P.I.)    Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:  National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R01         Period:    08/01/05-­‐07/31/10  The  goal  of  this  project  is  to  examine  the  biological  and  environmental  mechanisms  by  which  relative  socioeconomic  deprivation  leads  to  disability  in  older  people.    Neighborhood  Context  and  the  Health  of  Older  Adults  Principal  Investigator  Agency:    National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R01  AG022488-­‐01       Period:    09/30/03  -­‐  08/31/08  This  research  examines  the  extent  to  which  neighborhood  social  context  influences  the  health  and  well-­‐being  of  older  adults,  and,  in  turn,  how  the  presence  of  older  adults  in  the  community  affects  neighborhood  social  cohesion  and  stability.          Social  Context  and  Mexican-­‐Origin  Youth  (R.  Frank,  P.I.)  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:  National  Institute  of  Child  Health  and  Human  Development    

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Type:  R03         Period:    04/01/06-­‐03/31/08  This  project  will  examine  patterns  of  educational  attainment,  health  outcomes,  and  risk-­‐taking  behaviors  among  Mexican-­‐Origin  youth  and  the  degree  to  which  these  vary  by  generational  status  and  neighborhood  social  context.      Re-­‐Engineering  Translational  Research  at  the  University  of  Chicago  (J.  Solway,  P.I.)    Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:  NIH/NCCAM    Type:  U54  RR023560         Period:  09/17/07-­‐09/29/12  The  goal  of  this  grant  is  to  create  an  institutionally-­‐integrated  Clinical  and  Translational  Program  designed  to  leverage  our  substantial  multi-­‐disciplinary  expertise  (high  throughput  technologies,  novel  phenotype-­‐  and  grid  accessible-­‐  bioinformatics,  health  disparities  research,  clinical  trials,  medical  ethics)  in  order  to  rapidly  translate  biomedical  discovery  into  personalized  therapies  for  our  diverse  adult  and  pediatric  patient  populations.    Chicago  Center  of  Excellence  in  Health  Promotion  Economics  (D.  Meltzer,  P.I.)    Core  Co-­‐Director,  Neighborhood  and  Health  Disparities  Core    Agency:    Centers  for  Disease  Control  and  Prevention    Type:  P30  CD000147     Period:  10/01/04  –  09/30/07      The  goal  of  the  Center’s  work  is  to  develop  and  apply  economic  methods  to  advance  knowledge  about  the  role  of  economic  factors  in  health  behaviors,  health  promotion  initiatives,  and  health  disparities  across  racial,  ethnic,  socioeconomic,  and  geographic  dimensions.    Evaluation  of  TEACH  Research  (D.  Meltzer,  P.I.)  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:  NIH/NIGMS  Type:  R01GM75292       Period:  01/1/05-­‐12/31/08  The  goal  of  this  project  is  to  develop  a  precollege  clinical  research  enrichment  program  in  order  to  increase  the  entry  and  success  of  underrepresented  minorities  in  clinical  research  careers.      Social  Support  Networks  in  Urban  Neighborhoods    Agency:  University  of  Chicago  Center  for  Human  Potential  and  Public  Policy  Pilot  Grant    Period:  07/1/06  -­‐  9/30/06  The  aim  of  this  research  is  to  examine  the  density  and  quality  of  social  support  networks  for  adolescents  and  their  families  and  to  incorporate  information  about  the  neighborhood  context  in  which  they  live.      Social  Life,  Intimacy,  and  Health  in  Long-­‐term  Care  Facilities:  Network  and  Contextual  Effects  Agency:  University  of  Chicago  Center  on  Aging  Pilot  Grant  (National  Institute  on  Aging)  Type:  P30  AG-­‐12857-­‐09     Period:  10/1/02  -­‐  9/30/03  This  project  examines  social  life  and  intimacy  within  institutional  long-­‐term  care,  related  both  to  the  initiation  and  maintenance  of  social  networks  and  to  the      Neighborhood  Social  Organization  and  Health:    New  Directions  for  Research  on  the  Link  between  Individual  Health  Status  and  Community  Context  of  the  Aged  Agency:  University  of  Chicago  Center  on  Aging  Pilot  Grant  (National  Institute  on  Aging)  Type:  P30  AG-­‐12857-­‐09     Period:  10/1/02  -­‐  9/30/03  This  project  examines  the  role  of  neighborhood  social  and  economic  structure  for  the  health  of  older  residents  in  the  city  of  Chicago.          Using  the  Experience  Sampling  Method  (ESM)  to  Measure  Hospital  and  Nursing  Home  Quality  Agency:  University  of  Chicago  Center  on  Aging  Pilot  Grant  (National  Institute  on  Aging)  Type:  P30  AG-­‐12857-­‐09     Period:  10/1/02  -­‐  9/30/03  This  research  will  pilot  the  ESM  methodology  for  patient  satisfaction  measurement,  following  respondents  from  the  hospital  to  a  long-­‐term  care  facility.      Income  Inequality,  Social  Capital  and  Individual  Health  Outcomes:  A  Multi-­‐level  Study  Using  Medicare  Claims  Data  in  Metropolitan  Chicago  Agency:  University  of  Chicago  Center  on  Aging  Pilot  Grant  (National  Institute  on  Aging)  

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Type:  P30  AG-­‐12857-­‐06     Period:  7/1/01  -­‐  6/30/02  This  project  examines  the  role  of  neighborhood  economic  structure  and  social  capital  for  older  residents,  particularly  the  extent  to  which  they  influence  disease  trajectories.        Education,  Wealth,  and  Cognitive  Decline  in  Later  Life  Principal  Investigator  Agency:  National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R03  AG18491-­‐01     Period:  07/01/00-­‐06/30/01  This  research  examines  the  effects  of  education  and  other  sociodemographic  factors  on  change  in  cognitive  status,  attempting  to  clarify  the  extent  to  which  that  association  is  direct  and  the  extent  to  which  it  is  due  to  economic  confounding.      Co-­‐occurring  HIV  Risk  Behaviors  in  Community  Context  (subcontract  from  Ohio  State  University,  Christopher  R.  Browning,  P.I.)  Principal  Investigator  Agency:  National  Institute  of  Mental  Health  Type:  R03  MH61161-­‐01A1           Period:  11/01/01-­‐10/31/02  This  research  examines  the  community  context  of  health  risk  behaviors  related  to  HIV  transmission.            Instrument  Development  for  Evaluation  of  Nursing  Home  Care  Agency:  University  of  Chicago  Center  on  Aging  Pilot  Grant  (National  Institute  on  Aging)  Type:  P30  AG-­‐12857-­‐06   Period:  05/12/00-­‐05/12/01      The  aim  of  this  pilot  project  is  to  explore  the  feasibility  of,  and  lay  the  groundwork  for,  a  data  collection  effort  devoted  to  quality  assessment  in  nursing  home  care.    Improving  the  Quality  of  Nursing  Home  Care  Principal  Investigator  Agency:  Retirement  Research  Foundation  Period:  8/2/99-­‐4/30/00  The  goal  of  this  project  is  to  develop  an  outcome  ranking  system  that  will  allow  researchers  and  policy  makers  to  identify  nursing  homes  that  are  providing  high  quality  versus  low  quality  care.    Nursing  Home  Outcomes  as  Quality  Indicators  Principal  Investigator  Agency:  Agency  for  Health  Care  Policy  and  Research  Type:  R03  HS09827       Period:  8/2/99-­‐4/30/00  This  project  expands  on  the  Retirement  Research  Foundation  by  increasing  the  number  of  outcomes  studied  and  increasing  the  number  of  study  years.    The  Implications  of  Beneficiary  Characteristics  for  Implementing  Medicare+Choice  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:    Robert  Wood  Johnson  Foundation    Period:    7/01/99-­‐6/30/00  This  project  investigates  the  relationship  between  Medicare  beneficiaries'  physical,  cognitive,  and  social  characteristics  as  well  as  the  decision-­‐making  process  that  occurs  through  the  annual  open  enrollment  season.    Determinants  of  First  Nursing  Home  Entry  (Dissertation  Grant)  Principal  Investigator  Agency:    Agency  for  Health  Care  Policy  and  Research  Type:    R03  HS09334-­‐01       Period:    9/30/96-­‐9/29/97  This  study  examines  racial  differences  in  first  nursing  home  entry  and  the  role  of  socioeconomic  status  and  family  structure  in  this  difference.        

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Under  Review      The  Neighborhood  Context  of  Climate  Change:  Heat  Waves  in  Comparative  Perspective  Principal  Investigator  Agency:    National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R21AG040021-­‐01        This  application  proposes  a  cross-­‐national  comparison  between  Chicago  and  Paris  to  examine  predictors  of  heat-­‐wave  mortality  at  multiple  levels,  examining  the  potential  for  individual-­‐and  neighborhood-­‐level  predictors  to  vary  in  their  impact  across  these  two  locations.    Chronic  Conditions,  Utilization  and  Social  Context:  Linking  NSHAP  to  Medicare  Principal  Investigator  Agency:    National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R01AG041164-­‐01        This  project  will  link  Medicare  claims  data  to  the  National  Social  Life,  Health  and  Aging  Project  (NSHAP).    Creating  such  a  unified  data  source  would  result  in  a  unique,  publicly-­‐available  dataset  to:  1)  identify  new  classes  of  health;  2)  follow  health  transitions  over  time  based  on  those  classes;  and  3)  inform  chronic  disease  management.    Connecting  Olfactory  Decline  in  Aging  with  Clinical  Sequelae:  Neurosensory  Outcomes  and  Social  Context  Co-­‐Investigator  Agency:    National  Institute  on  Aging  Type:  R01AG055120-­‐01  This  project  is  designed  to  define  the  health  trajectories  that  lead  from  olfactory  loss  to  cognitive  decline,  Alzheimer’s  Disease,  and/or  death.  We  will  exploit  and  extend  the  wealth  of  information  available  in  NSHAP  by  linking  Medicare  claims  in  order  to  identify,  categorize,  and  quantify  the  intervening  clinical  events,  the  order  in  which  they  occur,  the  associated  healthcare  utilization  and  costs,  and  the  effects  of  social  context.    TEACHING  RESPONSIBILITIES    Sociology  40188.    Advanced  Methods  in  Survey  Research.    Spring  Quarter,  2014,  2015,  2016.        Sociology  20215.    Urban  Health.    Spring  Quarter,  2012,  2013,  2014,  2015,  2016.      Sociology    Inquiry  II,  2013.        Health  Studies  351.  Introduction  to  Health  Services  Research  (with  W.  Manning).    Spring  Quarter,  2004.    Health  Studies  352  (Cross-­‐listed  with  Sociology,  the  Harris  School  of  Public  Policy).    Demography  of  Aging  and  the  Life  Course.    Autumn  Quarter,  2000,  2001,  2002,  2003,  2005,  2006,  2007.    Spring  Quarter  2005,  Winter  Quarter  2009.    Health  Studies  379.  Health  Outcomes  and  the  Quality  of  Medical  Care  (with  M.  Chin).    Winter  Quarter  2000,  2001,  2003.    Health  Studies  380  (Cross-­‐listed  with  the  Harris  School  of  Public  Policy).    Health  Status  Assessment:    Measurement  and  Inference.  (with  C.  O'Muircheartaigh  in  2002).    Winter  Quarter,  2002,  2007,  2008,  2009,  2011.  Spring  Quarter  2006,  2010.            PROFESSIONAL  ORGANIZATIONS/ACTIVITIES    Population  Association  of  America,  Board  of  Directors  (2016-­‐2018)  American  Sociological  Association,  Population  Section  Council  (2012-­‐2015)  Associate  Editor,  American  Journal  of  Sociology  

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Associate  Editor,  Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences    Associate  Editor,  Journal  of  Aging  and  Health  Associate  Editor,  Progress  in  Community  Health  Partnerships:  Research,  Education,  and  Action  Chair,  University  of  Chicago  Graham  School  of  Continuing  Liberal  and  Professional  Studies  Board  (2014-­‐2017)  University  of  Chicago  Women’s  Leadership  Council  (2012-­‐2015)  University  of  Chicago  Board  of  Campus  and  Student  Life  (2009-­‐2012)  University  of  Chicago  Council  of  the  Senate  (2008-­‐2011)  University  of  Chicago  Committee  to  Assess  the  University's  Report  on  the  Status  of  Academic  Women    University  of  Chicago  Urban  Committee  University  of  Chicago  Committee  on  Demographic  Training  University  of  Chicago  Health  Professions  Advisory  Committee  University  of  Chicago  Urban  Network  Advisory  Board    National  Health  and  Aging  Trends  Study  (NHATS)  Advisory  Board      UCLA  Blum  Center  on  Poverty  and  Health  in  Latin  America,  Robert  Wood  Johnson  Advisory  Panel  on  Social  Cohesion  The  Center  for  Interdisciplinary  Inquiry  &  Innovation  in  Sexual  &  Reproductive  Health  (Ci3)  Advisory  Board  University  of  Chicago  Urban  CCD    University  of  Chicago  Data  Science  for  Social  Good,  Mentor  NIH  Review  Panel,  ZRG1  HOP  B  90,  Social  Science  and  Population  Studies  (permanent  study  section  member)  Population  Sciences  Subcommittee,  NICHD  Research  Infrastructure  for  Demographic  and  Behavioral  Population  Science  (R24)  2013,  NICHD,  Chair      NIH  Review  Panel,  NIA  Roybal  Centers    NIH  Review  Panel,  HOP  J  90,  Non-­‐Intervention  Community-­‐level  Health  Promotion,  February  2004  NIH  Review  Panel,  RFA-­‐OB_03_001  Special  Emphasis  Panel,  Pathways  Linking  Education  to  Health,  July  2003  Chair,  Causal  Inference  in  Neighborhood-­‐based  Research  Conference,  University  of  Chicago,  December  1,  2006  Co-­‐Chair,  Local  Area  Processes:  Theories,  Methods  and  Models  Conference,  University  of  Chicago,  May  18,  2012  Co-­‐Chair,  Convening  on  Urban  Data  Science,  University  of  Chicago,  April  27-­‐29,  2016  Co-­‐Chair,  University  of  Chicago  Demography  Workshop    Population  Association  of  America  (Session  Chair  2016,  Member)  American  Sociological  Association  (Member)  Academy  Health  (Member)  Gerontological  Society  of  America  (Member)  Journal  of  Health  and  Social  Behavior  (Reviewer)  Journal  of  Human  Resources  (Reviewer)    Social  Science  and  Medicine  (Reviewer)  American  Journal  of  Public  Health  (Reviewer)    American  Journal  of  Sociology  (Reviewer)  Journal  of  General  Internal  Medicine  (Reviewer)  Medical  Care  (Reviewer)  Quality  of  Life  Research  (Reviewer)  Proceedings  of  the  National  Academy  of  Sciences  (Reviewer)    RAND  Summer  Institute  in  Demography,  Economics  and  Epidemiology  of  Aging  (1996,  1998)  RAND  Mini-­‐medical  School  for  Demographers  and  Economists  (1998)  NIA  and  Office  of  Research  on  Minority  Health  Technical  Assistance  Workshop  on  Aging  Research  (1998)    

PUBLICATIONS    

Peer-­‐Reviewed  Articles    

Burton  L,  Kasper  J,  Shore  A,  Cagney  KA,  LaVeist  TA,  Cubbin  C,  German  PS.  The  structure  of  informal  care:  are  there  differences  by  race?  The  Gerontologist.  1995;35(6):744-­‐752.  

Rojas  M,  Mandelblatt  J,  Cagney  KA,  Kerner  JF,  Freeman,  HP.  Barriers  to  follow-­‐up  of  abnormal  screening  mammograms  among  low-­‐income  minority  women.  Ethnicity  and  Health.  1996;1(3):221-­‐228.  

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Mandelblatt  J,  Freeman  H,  Winczewski  D,  Cagney  KA,  Williams  S,  Trowers  R,  Tang  J,  Kerner  J.  Implementation  of  a  breast  and  cervical  cancer  screening  program  in  a  public  hospital  emergency  department.  Annals  of  Emergency  Medicine.  1996;28(5):493-­‐498.  

Mandelblatt  J,  Freeman  HP,  Winczewski  D,  Cagney  KA,  Williams  S,  Trowers  R,  Tang  J,  Gold  K,  Lin  TH,  Kemer  JK.  The  costs  and  effects  of  cervical  and  breast  cancer  screening  in  a  public  hospital  emergency  room.  American  Journal  of  Public  Health.  1997;87(7):  1182-­‐1189.  

Wu  AW,  Cagney  KA,  St.  John  PD.  Health  status  assessment:  completing  the  clinical  data  base.  Journal  of  General  Internal  Medicine.  1997;  12(4):254-­‐255.  

O’Malley  AS,  Mandelblatt  J,  Gold  K,  Cagney  KA,  Kerner  J.    Continuity  of  care  and  the  use  of  breast  and  cervical  cancer  screening  services  in  a  multiethnic  community.    Archives  of  Internal  Medicine.  1997;157(13):  1462-­‐1470.  

Cagney  KA,  Agree  EM.    Racial  differences  in  skilled  nursing  care  and  home  health  use:    the  mediating  effects  of  family  structure  and  social  class.    Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences.    1999;54(4):S223-­‐S236.  

Mandelblatt  JS,  Gold  K,  O’Malley  AS,  Taylor  K,  Cagney  KA,  Hopkins  JS,  Kerner  J.    Breast  and  cervix  cancer  screening  among  multi-­‐ethnic  women:    role  of  age,  health,  and  source  of  care.    Preventive  Medicine.  1999;28(4):418-­‐425.    

Bass  EB,  Jenckes  MW,  Fink  NE,  Cagney  KA,  Wu  AW,  Sadler  JH,  Meyer  KB,  Levey  AS,  Powe  NR.  Use  of  focus  groups  to  identify  concerns  about  dialysis.    Medical  Decision  Making.    1999;19(3):287-­‐295.  

Cagney  KA,  Wu  AW,  Fink  NE,  Jenckes  M,  Meyer  KB,  Bass  EB,  Powe  NR.  Formal  literature  review  of  quality  of  life  instruments  used  in  end-­‐stage  renal  disease.    American  Journal  of  Kidney  Diseases.    2000;36(2):327-­‐336).  

Wu  AW,  Fink  NE,  Cagney  KA,  Meyer  KB,  Jenckes  MW,  Bass  EB,  Rubin  HR,  Sadler  JH,  Powe  NR.  Development  of  a  disease-­‐specific  quality  of  life  measure  for  renal  dialysis.  American  Journal  of  Kidney  Diseases.    2001;37(1):11-­‐21.  

Cagney  KA.    Lauderdale  D.  Education,  wealth  and  cognitive  function  in  later  life.    Journal  of  Gerontology:    Psychological  Sciences.    2002;57B(2):P163-­‐P172.  

Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    Neighborhood  structural  disadvantage,  collective  efficacy,  and  self-­‐rated  physical  health  in  an  urban  setting.    Journal  of  Health  and  Social  Behavior.    2002;43:383-­‐399.  

 ∗Wen  M,  Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    Poverty,  affluence,  and  income  inequality:    Neighborhood  economic  

structure  and  its  implications  for  health.    Social  Science  and  Medicine.    2003;57:843-­‐860  (senior  author).      Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA,  *Wen  M.    Explaining  variation  in  health  status  across  space  and  time:    implications  

for  racial  and  ethnic  disparities  in  self-­‐rated  health.    Social  Science  and  Medicine.    2003;57:1221-­‐1235.        Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    Moving  beyond  poverty:    neighborhood  structure,  social  processes,  and  health.  

Journal  of  Health  and  Social  Behavior.    2003;44:552-­‐571.    Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    Exploring  neighborhood-­‐level  variation  in  asthma  and  other  respiratory  diseases:    

The  contribution  of  neighborhood  social  context.    Journal  of  General  Internal  Medicine.    2004;  19:229-­‐236.      

 Cagney  KA,  Agree  EM.  Racial  differences  in  formal  long-­‐term  care:    Does  the  timing  of  parenthood  play  a  

role?    Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences.    2005;60B:S137-­‐S145.  

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 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  *Wen  M.    Racial  disparities  in  self-­‐rated  health  at  older  ages:    What  difference  

does  the  neighborhood  make?    Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences.    2005;60B:S181-­‐S190.        Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  *Wen  M.    Racial  disparities  in  self-­‐rated  health  at  older  ages  and  the  dangers  of  

obfuscating  neighborhood  effects  research.      Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences.    2005;60B:S193-­‐S194.        

 *Wen  M,  Cagney  KA,  Christakis  NA.    Effect  of  specific  aspects  of  community  social  environment  on  the  

mortality  of  individuals  diagnosed  with  serious  illness.    Social  Science  and  Medicine.    2005;61:1119-­‐1134.        *Santry  HP,  Chin  MH,  Cagney  KA,  Alverdy  JC,  Lauderdale  DS.    The  use  of  multidisciplinary  teams  to  evaluate  

bariatric  surgery  patients:  Results  of  a  national  survey.    Obesity  Surgery.    2006;16:59-­‐66.    Browning  CR,  *Wallace  D,  Feinberg,  S,  Cagney  KA.  Neighborhood  social  processes  and  disaster-­‐related  

mortality:  The  case  of  the  1995  Chicago  heat  wave.    American  Sociological  Review.    2006;71:665-­‐682  (senior  author).      

 Cagney  KA.    Neighborhood  age  structure  and  its  implications  for  health.    Journal  of  Urban  Health.    

2006;83:827-­‐834.        *Santry  HP,  Lauderdale  DS,  Cagney  KA,  Rathouz  PJ,  Alverdy  JC,  Chin  MH.    Predictors  of  patient  selection  in  

bariatric  surgery.  Annals  of  Surgery.    2007;245:59-­‐67.          Tandon  SD,  Phillips  K,  Bordeaux  B,  Bone  L,  Brown  PB,  Cagney  KA,  Gary  T,  Kim  M,  Levine  D,  Price  E,  Syndor  K,  

Stone  K,  Bass  E.    A  vision  for  progress  in  community  health  partnerships.    Progress  in  Community  Health  Partnerships:  Research,  Education,  and  Action.    2007;1:11-­‐30.      

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  *Wallace  DM.    The  Latino  paradox  in  neighborhood  context:    The  case  of  asthma  

and  other  respiratory  conditions.    American  Journal  of  Public  Health.    2007;97:919-­‐925.        *Fisher  TL,  Burnet  D,  Huang  ES,  Chin  MH,  Cagney  KA.    Cultural  leverage:  Interventions  utilizing  culture  to  

narrow  racial  disparities  in  health  care.    Medical  Care  Research  and  Review.    2007;64:243S-­‐282S  (senior  author).    

 *Wen  M,  Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    Neighborhood  deprivation,  social  capital  and  regular  exercise  during  

adulthood:  A  multilevel  study  in  Chicago.    Urban  Studies.    2007;44:1-­‐18  (senior  author).    Mendes  de  Leon  CF,  Cagney  KA,  Bienias   JL,  Barnes  LL,  Skarupski  KA,  Scherr  PA,  Evans  DA.    Neighborhood  

conditions  and  walking  in  community-­‐dwelling  older  adults:    A  multi-­‐level  analysis.    Journal  of  Aging  and  Health,  2009;21:155-­‐171.    

 Cagney   KA,   Glass   TA,   Skarupski   KA,   Barnes   LL,   Schwartz   BS,   Mendes   de   Leon   C.     Neighborhood-­‐level  

cohesion  and  disorder:  Measurement   and   validation   in   two  older   adult   urban  populations.     Journal   of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences,  2009;64B:415-­‐424.  

 *Saunders  M,  Cagney  KA,  Ross  LF,  Alexander  GC.    Neighborhood  poverty,  racial  composition,  and  renal  

transplant  waitlist.    American  Journal  of  Transplantation.    2010;10:1912-­‐1917  .      Cagney  KA,  *York  Cornwell  E.    Neighborhoods  and  health  in  later  life:  The  intersection  of  biology  and  

community.      In  Keith  Whitfield  (ed).  Biobehavioral  Perspectives  on  Health  in  Later  Life.      Annual  Review  of  Gerontology  and  Geriatrics.    2010.      

 *Galinsky  AM,  Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    Is  collective  efficacy  age  graded?    The  development  and  evaluation  

of  a  new  measure  of  collective  efficacy  for  older  adults.    Journal  of  Aging  Research,  2012;2012:1-­‐10.    

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 Shega  JW,  Andrew  M,  Hemmerich  J,  Cagney  KA,  Ersek  M,  Weiner  DK,  Dale  W.    The  relationship  of  pain  and  

cognitive  impairment  with  social  vulnerability—an  analysis  of  the  Canadian  Study  of  Health  and  Aging.    Pain  Medicine,  2012;13:190-­‐197.          

 Browning,  CR,  Cagney,  KA,  *Iveniuk,  J.  Neighborhood  stressors  and  cardiovascular  health:  Crime  and  C-­‐

reactive  protein  in  Dallas,  USA.  Social  Science  &  Medicine,  2012,  doi:  10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.03.027.    Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Jackson  AL,  Soller,  B.    Social  network,  neighborhood,  and  institutional  effects  in  

aging  research:    An  integrated  "activity  space"  approach  to  examining  social  context.    In  New  Directions  in  Social  Demography,  Social  Epidemiology  and  the  Sociology  of  Aging,  Division  on  Behavioral  and  Social  Sciences  and  Education;  National  Research  Council;  Waite  LJ,  Plewes  TJ,  eds.  Washington,  DC:  National  Academies  Press;  2013.      

 *Bromell  L,  Cagney  KA.    Companionship  in  the  neighborhood  context:  Older  adults’  living  arrangements  and  

perceptions  of  social  cohesion.  Research  on  Aging,  2013,  doi:  10.1177/0164027512475096.    Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  *Iveniuk  J,  and  English  N.    The  onset  of  depression  during  the  Great  Recession:  

Foreclosure  and  older  adult  mental  health.    American  Journal  of  Public  Health,  2014;104:498-­‐505.    *York  Cornwell  E,  Cagney  KA.    Assessment  of  neighborhood  context  in  a  nationally-­‐representative  sample  of  

older  adults.    Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences.  2014;  doi:  10.1093/geronb/gbu052.    Hawkley  LC,  Kocherginsky  M,  Wong  J,  Kim  J,  Cagney  KA.    Missing  Data  in  Wave  2  of  NSHAP:  Prevalence,  

Predictors,  and  Recommended  Treatment.    Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences,  2014;  doi:  10.1093/geronb/gbu044.      

 *Saunders  M,  Lee  H,  Maene  C,  Schuble  T,  Cagney  KA.    Proximity  does  not  equal  access:  Racial  disparities  in  

access  to  high  quality  dialysis  facilities.    Journal  of  Racial  and  Ethnic  Health  Disparities,  2014;  1:  291-­‐299  (senior  author).    

 *Iveniuk  J,  O’Muircheartaigh  C,  Cagney  KA.    Religious  influence  on  older  Americans'  sexual  lives:  A  

nationally-­‐representative  profile.    Archives  of  Sexual  Behavior,  2015;  doi 10.1007/s10508-­‐015-­‐0534-­‐0.        Kelley-­‐Moore  JA,  Cagney  KA,  Skarupski  KA,  Everson-­‐Rose  SA,  Mendes  de  Leon  CF.    Do  local  social  hierarchies  

matter  for  mental  health?  A  study  of  neighborhood  social  status  and  depressive  symptoms  in  older  adults.  Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences,  2015;  10.1093/geronb/gbv047.      

 Jeremy  N.  Miles  JN,  Weden  MM,  Lavery  D,  Escarce  JJ,  Cagney  KA,  Shih  RA.    Constructing  a  time-­‐invariant  

measure  of  the  socio-­‐economic  status  of  U.S.  census  tracts.    Journal  of  Urban  Health,  2016;  93(1):213-­‐232.    

 *Riley  AR,  Hawkley  LC,  Cagney  KA.    Racial  Differences  in  the  Effects  of  Neighborhood  Disadvantage  on  Residential  Mobility  in  Later  Life.  Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences,  2016;  gbw064.      

 Cagney  KA,  Sterrett  D,  Benz  J,  Thompson  T.  Social  resources  and  community  resilience  in  the  wake  of  Superstorm  Sandy.    PLOS  ONE,  forthcoming.      

   

Book  Chapters    

Steinwachs  DM,  Wu  AW,  Cagney  KA.  Outcomes  research  and  quality  of  care.  In  Spilker  B,  ed.,  Quality  of  Life  and  Pharmacoeconomics  in  Clinical  Trials.  Raven  Press,  New  York.  1996.  

Wu  AW,  Cagney  KA.  The  role  of  quality  of  life  assessments  in  medical  practice.  In  Spilker  B,  ed.,  Quality  of  

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Life  and  Pharmacoeconomics  in  Clinical  Trials.  Raven  Press,  New  York.  1996.  

Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    Neighborhoods  and  health.    Encyclopedia  of  Sociology.  Malden,  MA:  Blackwell.    2007.      

Cagney  KA,  Wen  M.    Social  capital  and  aging-­‐related  outcomes.    In  Kawachi  I,  Subramanian,  SVand  Kim  D  (eds),  Social  Capital  and  Health.    New  York,  NY:  Springer.    2007.      

 Barnes  LL,  Cagney  KA,  Bienias  JL,  Evans  DA,  Mendes  de  Leon  CF.    Social  capital,  social  engagement  and  

cognitive  aging.    In  Hofer  SM  and  Alwin  DF  (eds),  Handbook  of  Cognitive  Aging.    Thousand  Oaks,  CA:  Sage.    2008.    

 Robert  SA,  Cagney  KA,  Weden  M.    A  life  course  approach  to  the  study  of  neighborhoods  and  health.    IN  Bird  

C,  Conrad  P,  Fremont  AM,  Timmermans  S  (eds),  Handbook  of  Medical  Sociology  (6th  edition).    Nashville,  TN:  Vanderbilt  University  Press.    2010.      

 Browning  CR,  Bjornstrom  E,  Cagney  KA.    Health  and  mortality  consequences  of  the  physical  environment.    In  

Rogers  R  and  Crimmins  E  (eds),  The  International  Handbook  of  Adult  Mortality.    New  York,  NY:  Springer.    2011.  

 Browning,  CR,  Cagney  KA,  *Iveniuk  J.    Neighborhood  stressors  and  cardiovascular  risk.  In  Sanders  B,  Thomas  

YF,  and  Deeds  BG  (eds),  Crime,  HIV,  and  Health:  Intersections  of  Criminal  Justice  and  Public  Health  Concerns.  Heidelberg:  Springer  Dordrecht.  Pp.  187-­‐206.  2013.    

 Browning,  C  R,  Cagney,  KA,  *Morris,  K.    Early  Chicago  School  theory.  In  Bruinsma  G  (ed),  Encyclopedia  of  

Criminology  and  Criminal  Justice,  Springer  New  York.  Pp.  1233-­‐1242.  2014.        

Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA,  Boettner,  B.    Neighborhoods,  place,  and  the  life  course.    In  Shanahan  M  (ed)  Handbook  of  the  Life  Course  (2nd  edition).    Springer  New  York.  Pp.  597-­‐620.  2016.      

 Non-­‐peer  Reviewed  Articles  

Cagney  KA.    Privatization  in  the  Irish  health  care  system.  Policy  paper  for  the  office  of  Senator  Brendan  

Ryan.  Irish  Senate  (Seanad).  December,  1987.  

Cagney  KA.    Health  kick.    The  Nation,  September  25,1989.    Cagney  KA.    Social  capital  and  the  community  context  of  older  adults:    A  research  agenda.    Report  to  the  

Behavioral  and  Social  Research  Program,  National  Institute  on  Aging.    2006.      Abstracts  

 Fink  NE,  Jenckes  MW,  Bass  EB,  Meyer  KB,  Sadler  JH,  Cagney  KA,  Hermann  JA,  Rubin  HR,  Wu  AW.    Identifying  

and  prioritizing  patient  preferences  for  dialysis  treatments.    Journal  of  the  American  Society  of  Nephrology.    1995;6(3):528.  

Fink  NE,  Wu  AW,  Cagney  KA,  Meyer  KB,  Herbert  RJ,  Jenckes  MW,  Sadler  JH.    Development  and  testing  of  the  CHOICE  health  experience  questionnaire  (CHEQ)  –  An  ESRD  and  dialysis-­‐specific  quality-­‐of-­‐life  measure.    Journal  of  the  American  Society  of  Nephrology.    1995;6(3):528.  

Lauderdale  DS,  Cagney  KA.    Limitations  to  the  use  of  education  as  an  SES  indicator  in  studies  of  the  elderly:    confounding  by  cognition.    In  Adler  NE,  Marmot  M,  McEwen  BS,  Stewart  J,  eds.  Socioeconomic  Status  and  Health  in  Industrialized  Nations:    Social,  Psychological,  and  Biological  Pathways.    Annals  of  the  New  York  Academy  of  Sciences.    Vol  896;373-­‐375.    New  York  Academy  of  Sciences,  New  York,  New  York.    1999.  

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Lauderdale  DS,  Cagney  KA.    Education  and  cognition  in  later  life:      To  what  extent  is  education  a  proxy  for  socioeconomic  status?    American  Journal  of  Epidemiology.    1999;149(11):92.  

Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wen  M.    Race  and  self-­‐rated  health  at  older  ages:    What  difference  does  the  neighborhood  make?      Gerontologist.    2001;41:115.      

Mendes  de  Leon  CF,  Barnes  LL,  Cagney  KA,  Bienias  JL,  Skarupski  KA,  Scherr  PA,  Evans  DA.    Neighborhood  research  in  older  adults:  Findings  from  the  Chicago  neighborhood  and  disability  study.        American  Journal  of  Epidemiology.    2007;165(11):45.  

Cagney  KA.  A  social  capital  approach  to  the  Hispanic  Paradox.  American  Journal  of  Epidemiology  2008;167:S137.  

 

Manuscripts  under  Review  

Cagney  KA,  *York  Cornwell  E,  *Iveniuk  J.    Internalizing  neighborhood  disorder  (under  review,  American  Sociological  Review).      

 York  Cornwell  E,  Cagney  KA.    Aging  in  Activity  Space:  Results  from  a  Smartphone-­‐Based  GPS-­‐Tracking  Study  of  Urban  Seniors  (under  review,  Journal  of  Gerontology:  Social  Sciences).      

 Cagney  KA,  Cornman  JC,  Freedman  VA,  Agree  EM,  Cohen  MA,  Miller  J.    The  impact  of  assistive  technology  

on  caregiver  burden  (revise  and  resubmit,  Journal  of  Aging  and  Health).      

 *Lee  H,  Cagney  KA,  Hawkley  LC.    Neighborhood  crime  and  the  weight  status  of  older  adults:  The  role  of  gender  (revise  and  resubmit,  Journal  of  Health  and  Social  Behavior).      

   

Manuscripts  in  Preparation    

Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Kaufman  J.    Interracial  unease  in  an  urban  setting:  The  influence  of  neighborhood  social  context  (to  be  submitted,  Social  Forces).  

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  *Wen  M.    Death  and  decline:  The  role  of  neighborhood-­‐level  mortality  in  the  maintenance  of  social  capital  (to  be  submitted,  American  Sociological  Review).  

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    Neighborhood  stressors  and  health:  Crime  spikes,  social  cohesion,  and  short-­‐term  changes  in  BMI  (to  be  submitted,  Journal  of  Health  and  Social  Behavior).      

 *Lee  H,  *Caldwell  JT,  Maene  C,  Cagney  KA,  Saunders  MR.        Does  neighborhood  racial/ethnic  integration  correspond  with  better  access  to  dialysis  treatment?  Evidence  from  End-­‐Stage  Renal  Disease  patients  in  Chicago  (to  be  submitted,  American  Journal  of  Public  Health).      

 *Caldwell  JT,  *Lee  H,  Cagney  KA.    Neighborhood  racial  and  ethnic  density,  compromised  physical  and  social  resources,  and  functional  decline  among  older  adults  in  the  United  States  (to  be  submitted,  Journal  of  Urban  Health).      

McCartin  MP,  Kozloski  MJ,  Kern  DW,  Wroblewski  KE,  McClintock  MK,  Cagney  KA,  and  Pinto  JM.  Home  environment  and  neighborhood  quality  is  associated  with  olfactory  ability  in  older  US  adults  (to  be  submitted,  American  Journal  of  Public  Health).      

 *Kalidi,  P,  *Karlin  J,  Cagney  KA,  Meltzer  DM.  Racial  disparities  in  length  of  hospital  stay:  Differential  sensitivity  to  patient  preferences  (to  be  submitted,  JAMA).      

 

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Friedman  EM,  Shih  RA,  Slaughter  M,  Weden  MM,  Cagney  KA.  Neighborhood  age  structure  and  cognitive  function  in  a  nationally-­‐representative  sample  of  older  adults  in  the  U.S.  (to  be  submitted,  Demography).      

 Friedman  EM,  Shih  RA,  Houle  J,  Slaughter  M,  Cagney  KA.  Neighborhood-­‐level  foreclosure  and  cognitive  decline  (to  be  submitted,  Social  Science  and  Medicine).      

   

Published  Presentations  or  Lectures    

Cagney  KA.  “Tay-­‐Sachs  Screening  in  New  York  City.”  Boston  College  Bioethics  Conference,  May,  1985.    Andersen  RA,  Cagney  KA,  Chen  MS,  Little  C.  “The  International  Collaborative  Study  of  Oral  Health  

Outcomes:  Preliminary  Results  from  New  Zealand.”    American  Public  Health  Association,  November,  1990.  

 Cagney  KA,  Kerner  JF,  Mandelblatt  J,  Freeman  HP.    “Cancer  Screening  in  a  Public  Hospital  Emergency  

Room.”  American  Public  Health  Association,  November,  1992.    Cagney  KA,  Kerner  JF,  Mandelblatt  J,  Freeman  HP.  “Cancer  Control  Needs  in  Multi-­‐Cultural  Communities.”  

American  Public  Health  Association,  November,  1992.  Cagney  KA,  Wu  AW,  Herbert  RJ,  Meyer  KB,  Jenckes  MW,  Bass  EB,  Powe  NR.    “Formal  Assessment  of  Quality  

of  Life  Instruments  for  End-­‐stage  Renal  Disease.”  Society  for  Medical  Decision  Making,  October,  1995.    Cagney  KA,  Powe  NR,  Wu  AW,  Herbert  RJ,  Fink  NE,  Jenckes  MW,  Meyer  KB.  “Race  and  Gender  Differences  in  

Importance  Ratings  of  Quality  of  Life  Domains  by  Patients  with  End-­‐stage  Renal  Disease.”    Society  for  Medical  Decision  Making,  October,  1995.  

 Kasper  JD,  Cagney  KA.  “The  Consumer  Perspective:  Views  of  Older  Disabled  Women  and  Those  Who  Care  

for  Them.”    American  Public  Health  Association,  November,  1996.    Cagney  KA,  Agree  EM.  “Race,  Social  Class  and  Family  Structure:  Determinants  of  Long-­‐term  Care  

Arrangements.”    Population  Association  of  America,  March,  1998.    Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  the  Risk  of  First  Skilled  Nursing  Facility  (SNF)  Care.”    National  Institute  on  

Aging/Office  of  Research  on  Minority  Health  Technical  Assistance  Workshop,  June,  1998.    Cagney  KA,  Lauderdale  DS.    “Education  and  Cognition  in  Later  Life:    Is  Education  a  Proxy  for  Socioeconomic  

Status?”    Population  Association  of  America,  New  York,  NY,  March,  1999.    Lauderdale  DS,  Cagney  KA.    “Limitations  to  the  Use  of  Education  as  an  SES  Indicator  in  Studies  of  the  Elderly:    

Confounding  by  Cognition.”  New  York  Academy  of  Sciences  Conference  –  Socioeconomic  Status  and  Health  in  Industrialized  Nations:    Social,  Psychological  and  Biological  Pathways,  Washington,  DC,  June,  1999.      

 Cagney  KA.    “Racial  Differences  in  Post-­‐Hospital  Care:    The  Impact  of  Medical  Treatment  Regimes.”    

Gerontological  Society  of  America,  San  Francisco,  CA,  November,  1999.    

Cagney  KA.    “Development  of  Nursing  Home  Quality  Indicators:  Accounting  For  Resident-­‐Level  Factors.”  Gerontological  Society  of  America,  Washington,  DC,  November,  2000.    

Cagney  KA,  Lauderdale  DS.  “Cognitive  Change  in  Later  Life:    the  Effects  of  Education  and  Wealth.”    Population  Association  of  America,  Washington,  DC,  March,  2001.  

 Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Social  Organization  and  Self-­‐rated  Health:  a  Multilevel  Analysis.”  

Population  Association  of  America,  Washington,  DC,  March,  2001.  

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 Merrell  K,  Lawlor  EF,  Cagney  KA,  Langa  K,  Willis  R.    “Medicare  Beneficiaries  as  Health  Plan  Consumers:  a  

Framework.    Academy  for  Health  Services  Research  and  Health  Policy,  Atlanta,  GA,  June,  2001.        Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wen  M.    “Race  and  Self-­‐rated  Health  at  older  Ages:    What  Difference  Does  the  

Neighborhood  Make?”  Gerontological  Society  of  America,  Chicago,  IL,  November,  2001.        Cagney  KA,  Agree  EM,  Astone  NM.    “Racial  Differences  in  Formal  Long-­‐term  Care:    Does  the  Timing  of  

Parenthood  Play  a  Role?”    Population  Association  of  America,  May,  Atlanta,  GA,  2002.    Wen  M,  Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Economic  Context  and  Self-­‐rated  Health:    A  Multilevel  

Study  in  the  City  of  Chicago.”  American  Sociological  Association,  Chicago,  IL,  August,  2002.        Cagney  KA,  Cornman  JC,  Freedman  VA,  Agree  EM,  Cohen  MA,  Miller  J.    “The  Impact  of  Assistive  Device  Use  

on  Caregiver  Burden.”    Gerontological  Society  of  America,  Boston,  MA,  November,  2002.    Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Health  and  Neighborhood  Context:    The  Reciprocal  Relationship  between  Social  

Organization  and  Aggregate  Health  Status.”    Population  Association  of  America,  Minneapolis,  MN,  May,  2003.      

 Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Social  Capital  and  Health.”    Chicago  Health  Services  Research  Consortium,  May,  

2003.        Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Understanding  Disparities  in  Asthma  Prevalence:  Health  Services  Research  at  the  

Neighborhood  Level.”    Academy  Health,  Nashville,  TN,  June,  2003.                ∗Wen  M,  Cagney  KA,  Christakis  NA.    “Community  Effects  on  the  Progression  of  Diseases:    A  Survival  analysis  

for  Seriously  Ill  Older  People.”  American  Sociological  Association,  Atlanta,  GA,  August,  2003.    Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wen  M.    “Community  Context  and  the  Health  of  Older  Residents:    Exploring  the  

Reciprocal  Relationship.”  Gerontological  Society  of  America,  San  Diego,  CA,  November,  2003.    Browning  CR,  Wallace  DM,  Feinberg  S,  Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Social  Processes  and  Disaster-­‐related  

Mortality:  The  Case  of  the  1995  Chicago  Heat  Wave.”  Population  Association  of  America,  Boston,  MA,  April,  2004.    

 Cagney  KA,  Browning,  CR,  Wallace,  DM.    “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:    The  Role  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context.”  Population  Association  of  America,  Philadelphia,  PA,  April,  2005.        Cagney  KA,  Browning,  CR,  Wallace,  DM.    “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:    The  Role  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context.”  International  Institute  of  Sociology,  Stockholm,  Sweden,  July,  2005.        Cagney  KA,  Browning,  CR,  Wallace,  DM.    “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:    The  Role  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context.”  American  Sociological  Association,  Philadelphia,  PA,  August,  2005.      Cagney  KA,  Mendes  de  Leon  CF,  Glass  TA.    “Measures  of  Neighborhood  Social  Cohesion  and  Disorder:  

Development  and  Validation  in  an  Older  Adult  Population.”    Gerontological  Society  of  America,  Orlando  FL,  November,  2005.  

 Cagney  KA,  Wallace  DM,  Browning  CR.    “Interracial  Unease  in  an  Urban  Setting:  The  Influence  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context.”    Population  Association  of  America,  Los  Angeles,  CA,  April,  2006.        Cagney  KA,  Wallace  DM,  Browning  CR.    “Interracial  Unease  in  an  Urban  Setting:  The  Influence  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context.”    American  Sociological  Association,  Montreal,  Canada,  August,  2006.        

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Cagney  KA.    “Social  Interaction  and  Interracial  Unease.”    Fifth  International  Conference  on  Urban  Health.    Amsterdam,  The  Netherlands,  October,  2006.        

 Cagney  KA.    “Age  and  the  Social  Context  of  Interracial  Unease.”    Gerontological  Society  of  America,  Dallas,  

TX,  November,  2006.      Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    “The  Social  Ecology  of  Public  Space:  Street  Activity  and  Violent  Crime  in  Urban  

Neighborhoods.”    The  Fourth  International  Conference  on  Population  Geographies,  Chinese  University  of  Hong  Kong,  July,  2007.        

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Neighborhood  Social  Processes  and  the  Life  Course:  Age-­‐specific  Assessments  of  

Trust,  Norms  and  the  Viability  of  Public  Space.”  Gerontological  Society  of  America,  San  Francisco,  CA,  November,  2007.    

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.  “Neighborhood  Social  Processes  and  Older  Adult  Well-­‐Being:    New  Results  from  

the  Neighborhood  Organization,  Aging,  and  Health  Study  (NOAH).”  Population  Association  of  America,  New  Orleans,  LA,  April,  2008.  

 Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    “The  Sociospatial  Context  of  Cardiovascular  Risk:  The  Relationship  between  

Neighborhood  Crime  Rates  and  Blood  Pressure.”    Population  Association  of  America,  Detroit,  MI,  April,  2009.  

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Iveniuk  J.∗    “Age  and  Neighborhood  Change:  Health  Consequences  of  

Neighborhood  Decline  for  Older  Adult  Residents.”  Population  Association  of  America,  San  Francisco,  CA,  May,  2012.  

 Invited  Lectures  

 Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:  Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”  Institute  for  Health  Care  Research,  Case  Western  Reserve  University,  November,  1998.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:  Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”  Division  of  General  Medicine,  Columbia  University  College  of  Physicians  and  Surgeons,  December,  1998.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:  Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”  Community  and  Family  Medicine,  Duke  University,  January,  1999.    Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:  Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”  Department  of  Health  Policy  and  Management,  Emory  University,  February,  1999.    Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:  Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”  Department  of  Preventive  Medicine,  University  of  Wisconsin-­‐Madison,  February,  1999.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:  Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”  Sanders-­‐Brown  Center  on  Aging,  University  of  Kentucky,  December,  1999.    

Cagney  KA.  “Family  Organization,  Intergenerational  Transfers  and  Family  Outcomes.”    Discussant,  Population  Association  of  America,  March,  1998.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Care  for  the  Elderly.”    A  panel  discussion  for  Odyssey,  WBEZ-­‐FM,  Chicago  Public  Radio.    August  

25,  2000.    

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Cagney  KA.    Testimony  to  the  Cook  County  Commission  on  Women’s  Issues  for  the  public  hearing  “The  Challenges  of  Elder  Caregiving:    A  Women’s  Issue.”    Chicago,  IL,  September  21,  2000.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Development  of  Nursing  Home  Quality  Indicators:  Accounting  For  Resident-­‐Level  Factors.”  

Population  Health  Program  and  Wisconsin  Network  for  Health  Policy  Research  Joint  Seminar  Series,  University  of  Wisconsin-­‐Madison,  October,  2000.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Nursing  Home  Quality  Assessment:    Incorporating  Resident-­‐Level  Indicators  and  Preferences  to  

Enhance  Quality  Measures.”  Community  and  Family  Medicine,  Duke  University,  February,  2001.      Cagney  KA.    “Racial  and  Socioeconomic  Status  Differences  in  Post-­‐hospital  Care  Arrangements  and  Informal  

Care  Networks.”    National  Institute  on  Aging  Health  Disparities  Workshop.    Andrus  Gerontology  Center,  University  of  Southern  California,  May,  2001.      

 Cagney  KA,  Lauderdale  DS.    “Cognitive  Change  in  Later  Life:    the  Effects  of  Education  and  Wealth.”  Gertrude  

H.  Sergievsky  Center,  Columbia  University,  December,  2001.        

Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.  “Neighborhood  Structure,  Social  Organization,  and  Health:  Exploring  the  Relationship  Between  Community  Context  and  Self-­‐rated  Health.”    Initiative  in  Population  Research,  The  Ohio  State  University,  May,  2002.      

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Exploring  the  Reciprocal  Relationship  between  Neighborhood  Social  

Organization  and  Health:    Chicago  in  the  1990s.”    Division  of  Health  Policy  and  Administration,  School  of  Public  Health,  University  of  Illinois  Chicago,  December,  2002.    

 Cagney  KA.    “The  Impact  of  Assistive  Device  Use  on  Caregiver  Burden.”    Home-­‐Based  Health  Services  

Conference,  MISYS  Healthcare  Systems,  ACI,  Inc.,  Chicago,  IL,  June,  2003.        Cagney  KA.    “Family  and  Kinship:  Social  Ties  and  the  Nature  of  Family  Functioning.”    Discussant,  American  

Sociological  Association,  Atlanta,  GA,  August,  2003.        Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Inequality  and  the  Spatial  Determinants  of  Health.”  Disparities  and  

Discrimination  in  Health  Care  and  Health  Outcomes,  University  of  Chicago,  November,  2003.      Cagney  KA.    “Community  Context  and  the  Health  of  Older  Residents:  Exploring  the  Reciprocal  Relationship.”  

Health  Services  Research  and  Policy  Seminar,  Northwestern  University,  December,  2003.    Cagney  KA,  Browning,  CR,  Wallace,  DM.    “Social  Disorder,  Social  Isolation,  and  the  Neighborhood  Context  of  

Mid-­‐  and  Later  Life.”  Department  of  Population  and  Family  Health  Sciences,  Bloomberg  School  of  Public  Health,  Johns  Hopkins  University,    March,  2004.      

 Cagney  KA,  Browning,  CR,  Wallace,  DM.    “Neighborhood  Social  Organization,  Aging,  and  Health.”  Health  and  

Retirement  Study  (HRS)  Health  and  Aging  Seminar,  University  of  Michigan,  March,  2004.        Cagney,  KA.  “Community-­‐Based  Participatory  Research:  Guides  for  Authors  and  Users.”    Panel  member,  

Society  of  General  Internal  Medicine,  Chicago,  May,  2004.      Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wallace  DM.  “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:  The  Role  of  Neighborhood  

Social  Context.”  University  of  Illinois  at  Chicago,  Seminar  in  Epidemiology  and  Biostatistics,  October,  2004.      

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wallace  DM.  “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:  The  Role  of  Neighborhood  

Social  Context.”  Chicago  Asthma  Consortium,  November,  2004.        Cagney  KA,  Agree  EA.  “Racial  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health:  The  Mediating  Effects  of  

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Social  Class,  Family  Structure,  and  the  Timing  of  Life  Course  Events.”  National  Long-­‐term  Care  Survey  Spotlight  on  Research  Conference.    Washington,  D.C.,  November,  2004.    

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wallace  DM.  “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:    The  Role  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context”  Department  of  Population  and  Family  Health  Sciences,  Bloomberg  School  of  Public  Health,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  March,  2005.  

 Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Social  Processes  and  Disaster-­‐related  Mortality:  The  Case  of  the  

1995  Chicago  Heat  Wave.”    Department  of  Sociology,  University  of  Utah,  April,  2005.        Cagney  KA.    “Racial  Differences  in  Self-­‐rated  Health  at  Older  Ages:    What  Difference  Does  the  Neighborhood  

Make?”  Advanced  Methods  for  Estimating  Health  Disparities,  International  Conference  for  Health  Policy  Research,  Boston,  MA,  October,  2005.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Social  Processes,  Physical  Conditions,  and  Disaster-­‐related  Mortality:  The  Case  

of  the  1995  Chicago  Heat  Wave.”    Regenstrief  Institute,  Indiana  University  School  of  Medicine,  January,  2006.      

 Cagney  KA.    “The  Neighborhood  Organization,  Aging  and  Health  Project  (NOAH):  The  Social  Context  of  Aging  

in  the  City  of  Chicago.”    Division  of  Health  Policy  and  Administration,  Yale  University  School  of  Public  Health,  April,  2007.  

 Cagney  KA.  “Cumulative  Advantage:  Education,  Health,  Wealth  and  Institutional  Contexts.”  Discussant.    

International  Sociological  Association  Research  Committee  on  Social  Stratification  and  Mobility  (RC  28).    Montreal,  Canada,  August,  2007.    

   Cagney  KA.  “Neighborhoods  and  Health.”  Discussant.  Population  Association  of  America,  New  Orleans,  LA,  

2008.    Cagney  KA.  “Social  Capital  and  the  Latino  Paradox.”  Discussant,  SER.  Chicago,  IL,  June,  2008.      Cagney  KA.    “Social  Resources  and  Cognitive  Function.”  ASPE-­‐NIA  Seminar  on  Health  and  Aging,  

Washington,  DC,  March,  2009.        Cagney  KA.    “The  Latino  Paradox  in  Neighborhood  Context:  The  Case  of  Asthma  and  Other  Respiratory  

Conditions.”  Universidad  del  Este,  San  Juan,  Puerto  Rico,  April,  2009.        Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “The  Neighborhood  Context  of  Health  Outcomes:  Mechanisms,  Measures  and  

Models.”  Invited  session,  Measuring  Neighborhood  Effects,  American  Sociological  Association,  San  Francisco,  CA,  August,  2009.          

 Cagney  KA.    “Measuring  Health-­‐related  Quality  of  Life.”  Discussant,  Workshop  on  Common  Metrics,  

National  Academy  of  Sciences,  February,  2010.          Cagney  KA.    “Health  Disparities  and  Insurance  Coverage.”    Invited  session,  Understanding  a  Dynamic  

Decade:  Population  Trends,  Public  Policy,  and  the  2010  Census  in  Chicago,  University  of  Chicago,  February,  2010.      

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Neighborhood  Stressors  and  Health:  Crime  Spikes,  Social  Cohesion  and  Short-­‐

term  Changes  in  BMI.”  Robert  Wood  Johnson  Health  and  Society  Scholars  Program,  University  of  Michigan,  February,  2010.      

 Cagney  KA.    “The  Continuum  of  Disorder  and  its  Implications  for  Health.”    Population  Studies  Center,  

University  of  Michigan,  March,  2010.          

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Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Crime,  Neighborhood  Context,  and  Health.”    Department  of  Epidemiology,  University  of  Michigan,  April,  2010.    

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Social  Organization  and  Social  Stress:    Elucidating  the  Neighborhood-­‐Health  

Association.”    Survey  Research  Center,  Institute  for  Social  Research,  University  of  Michigan,  July,  2010.      Cagney  KA,  *Cornwell  EY,  *Iveniuk  J.    “Internalizing  Neighborhood  Disorder.”    Institute  of  Government  and  

Public  Affairs,  The  University  of  Illinois  at  Chicago,  December,  2010.        Cagney  KA.    “Shock  of  Gray.”    A  discussion  with  the  author  Ted  Fishman  for  Extension  720  with  Milt  

Rosenberg.    December,  2010.    Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “The  Neighborhood  Context  of  Health  Disparities”  Mt  Sinai  Medical  Center,  Sinai  

Urban  Health  Institute,  December,  2010.          Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Neighborhood  Stressors  and  Health:  Crime  Spikes,  Social  Cohesion  and  Short-­‐

term  Changes  in  BMI.”  University  of  Wisconsin-­‐Madison,  February,  2011.        Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Neighborhood  Stressors  and  Health:  Crime  Spikes,  Social  Cohesion  and  Short-­‐

term  Changes  in  BMI.”  Cornell  University,  May,  2011.        Cagney  KA,  Cornwell  EY,  Iveniuk  J.  “Internalizing  Neighborhood  Disorder.”    C2S,  Northwestern  University,  

January,  2012.          Cagney  KA.  “Advancing  the  Conceptualization  and    Measurement  of  Neighborhood  Context  in  Aging  

Research.”  Brown  School  of  Social  Work,  Washington  University  in  St.  Louis,  April  2012.            

Cagney  KA.    “The  Computational  Social  Sciences  and  Lakeside”  and  “The  Population  Research  Center.”  Exploratory  Workshop  on  Energy  and  Environmental  Policy,  The  University  of  Chicago  Beijing  Center,  Beijing,  China,    January  31  –  February  1,  2013.  

 Cagney  KA.    “America  in  2050:  A  New  Demographic  Landscape.”  The  Atlantic’s  Generations  Forum,  

Washington,  DC,  May,  2013.        Cagney  KA.    “Foreclosure,  Neighborhood  Disorder,  and  Health.”    

 Population  Research  Institute,  Duke  University,  September,  2012.        Center  for  Demography  and  Ecology,  University  of  Wisconsin-­‐Madison,  November,  2013.    Institute  for  Population  Research,  The  Ohio  State  University,  January,  2014.        Population  Research  Center,  University  of  Texas  at  Austin,  April,  2014.        

Cagney  KA.    “Chicago  Lakeside:  A  Study  of  Neighborhood  Context  from  the  Ground  Up,”  Department  of  Sociology.  Northwestern  University,  October,  2014.      

Cagney  KA.    “Social  Environment  and  Health:  New  Findings  from  the  National  Social  Life,  Health  and  Aging  Project,”  Population  Studies  Center,  The  University  of  Pennsylvania,  December,  2014.    

 Cagney  KA.    “Activity  Space,  Social  Interaction  and  Health  in  Later  Life,”       Department  of  Sociology,  Yale  University,  February,  2016.         Population  Research  Center,  The  University  of  Texas  at  Austin,  April,  2016.      

Other  Lectures      Andersen  RA,  Chen  MS,  Little  C,  Cagney  KA.  “Causes  and  Correlates  of  Oral  Health  Status:  Preliminary  

Results  from  the  International  Collaborative  Study  II.”    The  University  of  Chicago  Center  for  Health  Administration  Studies  (CHAS)  Workshop,  1991.  

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 Andersen  RA,  Chen  MS,  Little  C,  Cagney  KA.  “Causes  and  Correlates  of  Oral  Health  Status:  Preliminary  

Results  from  the  International  Collaborative  Study  II.”    Northwestern  University  Health  Services  Research  Workshop,  1991.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Conducting  a  Quality  of  Life  Literature  Review  for  End-­‐stage  Renal  Disease.”    Presentation  to  

the  Robert  Wood  Johnson  Clinical  Scholars,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1996.    Cagney  KA.    “Working  with  Secondary  Data:  the  National  Long-­‐term  Care  Surveys.”    Guest  Lecturer  for  the  

course  Health  Issues  for  Aging  Populations,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1996,  1997.    Cagney  KA.  “The  Risk  of  Skilled  Nursing  (SNF)  Care  and  Medicare  Home  Health  Use:  The  Effects  of  Race  and  

Family  Structure.”    Outcomes  Research  Group  Workshop,  Section  of  General  Internal  Medicine,  University  of  Chicago,  1998.  

 Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  the  Risk  of  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:    Do  Family  Structure  

and  Financial  Resources  Play  a  Role?”    Demography  Workshop,  University  of  Chicago,  1998.    Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:    Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”    Social  Service  Administration,  University  of  Chicago,  January,  1999.      Cagney  KA.    “Race  Differences  in  Skilled  Nursing  Care  and  Home  Health  Use:    Do  Family  Structure  and  Social  

Class  Play  a  Role?”    Department  of  Health  Studies,  University  of  Chicago,  February,  1999.      Cagney  KA.    “Racial  Differences  in  Long-­‐Term  Care:    The  Link  Between  Medical  Care  and  Skilled  Nursing  

Care.”    Health  Economics/CHAS  Workshop,  University  of  Chicago,  October,  1999.  Cagney  KA.    “Development  of  Nursing  Home  Quality  Indicators:  Accounting  For  Resident-­‐Level  Factors.”  

Department  of  Health  Studies  Seminar  Series,  University  of  Chicago,  November,  2000.        Cagney  KA.    “Development  of  Nursing  Home  Quality  Indicators:  Accounting  For  Resident-­‐Level  Factors.”    

Department  of  Geriatrics  Seminar  Series,  University  of  Chicago,  March,  2001.        Cagney  KA.    “Medicare  Beneficiaries  and  Medicare+Choice:    Who’s  at  Risk  for  a  “+/-­‐“  Choice?”    Robert  

Wood  Johnson  Clinical  Scholars  Workshop,  University  of  Chicago,  February,  2001.        Merrell  K,  Cagney  KA.  “The  Elderly  as  Consumers  in  the  Health  Insurance  Market.”    University  of  

Chicago  Health  Economics/CHAS  Workshop,  University  of  Chicago,  June,  2001.        Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Racial  Differences  in  Self-­‐Rated  Health  at  Older  Ages:    The  Role  of  Neighborhood  

Context.”    Department  of  Health  Studies  Seminar  Series,  University  of  Chicago,  January,  2002.        Browning  CR,  Cagney  KA.    “Neighborhood  Socioeconomic  Status,  Social  Organization  and  Health.”  

Demography  Workshop,  University  of  Chicago,  February,  2002.    

Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Moving  Beyond  Poverty:  Neighborhood  Structure,  Social  Processes  and  Health.”  Faculty  Workshop  on  Medicine  and  the  Social  Sciences:    Disparities  and  Discrimination  in  Health  Care  and  Health,  University  of  Chicago,  February,  2003.          

 Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wallace  DM.  “Social  Disorder,  Social  Isolation,  and  the  Neighborhood  Context  of  

Mid-­‐  and  Later  Life.”  Alfred  P.  Sloan  Center  for  Parents,  Children,  and  Work,  University  of  Chicago,  February,  2004.  

 Cagney  KA.  “Racial  Differences  in  Long-­‐term  Care:    A  Life  Course  Perspective.”      Department  of  Comparative  

Human  Development,  University  of  Chicago,  January,  2005.        

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Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR,  Wallace  DM.    “Explaining  the  Latino  Asthma  Advantage:    The  Role  of  Neighborhood  Social  Context,”  Health  Economics  Workshop,  University  of  Chicago,  October,  2004.      

 Cagney  KA,  Wallace  DM,  Browning  CR.    “Interracial  Unease  in  an  Urban  Setting:  The  Influence  of  

Neighborhood  Social  Context,”  University  of  Chicago  Demography  Workshop,  November,  2005.      Cagney  KA,  Browning  CR.    “Neighborhood  Social  Processes  and  Older  Adult  Well-­‐being:  New  Results  from  

the  Neighborhood  Organization,  Aging,  and  Health  Study  (NOAH),”  Center  for  Population  Economics,  The  Economics  and  Biodemography  of  Aging  and  Health  Care  Workshop,  November,  2007.  

 Cagney  KA,  O’Muircheartaigh  C,  Schumm  P.  “Pathways  in  Later  Life:  A  Proposal  for  the  National  Disability  

Dynamics  Survey,”  University  of  Chicago  Demography  Workshop,  April,  2008.        Cagney  KA.  “The  Neighborhood  Context  of  Health  Disparities,”  MacLean  Center  for  Clinical  Medical  Ethics,  

University  of  Chicago,  October,  2010.        

Cagney  KA.  “Internalizing  Neighborhood  Disorder,”  Center  for  Population  Economics,  The  Economics  and  Biodemography  of  Aging  and  Health  Care  Workshop,  February,  2011.  

 Cagney  KA.  “The  Lakeside  Social  Science  Initiative,”  Alumni  Relations  &  Development,  University  of  Chicago.  

Urban  Imprint:  The  Art  and  Science  Shaping  Our  Cities,  New  York  City,  November,  2013.     City  of  Big  Data,  Chicago,  November,  2014.       Urban  Imprint:  The  Art  and  Science  Shaping  Our  Cities,  San  Francisco,  May,  2014.     Discover  UChicago  Seattle,  January,  2015.         Discover  UChicago  Hong  Kong,  March,  2015.        Cagney  KA.  Discussant,  “How  Housing  Dynamics  Shape  Neighborhood  Perceptions,”  M.  Desmond  (Harvard  

University).  Kreisman  Initiative  on  Housing  Law  and  Policy  conference,  Bringing  It  All  Back  Home:  Evidence  and  Innovation  in  Housing  Law  and  Policy,  June  2016.      

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