Download - Cagney CV 07 24 2016 - UChicago Sociology · Page 3 Updated 7/24/16 OTHER(EXPERIENCE(Jun)89
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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.
∗graduate student supervision