Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda.


Journal of Women & Aging | 2011

Gender, Marital Power, and Marital Quality in Later Life

Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda

This study uses data from the 1992 Health and Retirement Study to examine gender differences in marital power and marital quality among older adults and to assess whether there are gender differences in the correlates of marital quality and marital power in later life. Results show that women report lower marital happiness, marital interaction, and marital power than do men, on average. These differences persist even after controlling for a number of life-course events and transitions. Further, results show that gender differences are also evident in the relationship of employment, childrearing, caregiving, and health factors with marital quality and power.


Research on Aging | 2009

Racial-ethnic differences in subjective survival expectations for the retirement years

Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda; Zhenmei Zhang

Prior research finds a race anomaly in subjective life expectancy such that Blacks expect to live longer than Whites even though their actual life expectancy is lower, but it does not include other racial-ethnic groups. Using data from the 1998 Health and Retirement Study (n = 8,077), the authors find that the race anomaly in subjective survival expectations can be extended to Mexican Americans: Mexican Americans, regardless of their nativity, expect a lower chance of living to ages 75 and 85 than do Whites net of age and gender even though their actual life expectancy is higher. In addition, foreign-born Mexican Americans expect a lower chance of survival to older ages than native-born Mexican Americans, which is also opposite of actual mortality patterns.We also find that education and wealth interact with race-ethnicity to influence subjective survival expectations.Prior research finds a race anomaly in subjective life expectancy such that Blacks expect to live longer than Whites even though their actual life expectancy is lower, but it does not include other racial-ethnic groups. Using data from the 1998 Health and Retirement Study (n = 8,077), the authors find that the race anomaly in subjective survival expectations can be extended to Mexican Americans: Mexican Americans, regardless of their nativity, expect a lower chance of living to ages 75 and 85 than do Whites net of age and gender even though their actual life expectancy is higher. In addition, foreign-born Mexican Americans expect a lower chance of survival to older ages than native-born Mexican Americans, which is also opposite of actual mortality patterns. We also find that education and wealth interact with race-ethnicity to influence subjective survival expectations. Research on Aging 31(6) 688 –709


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2016

Grandparenting Roles and Volunteer Activity.

Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda; Margaret Platt Jendrek

OBJECTIVES We examine whether grandparenting roles are related to formal volunteering among older adults. METHOD Logistic regression is used to examine the likelihood of volunteering based on grandchild care using data from the 2004 wave of the Health and Retirement Study (n = 13,785). Longitudinal analyses utilize treatment effects models to examine changes in volunteering for grandparents who begin nonresidential grandchild care between the 2004 and 2008 waves (n = 10,811). RESULTS Results show that grandparents raising coresidential grandchildren have lower odds of volunteering than grandparents providing no regular grandchild care. However, grandparents who provide nonresidential grandchild care are more likely to volunteer than grandparents not providing grandchild care and those raising a coresidential grandchild. Grandparents who provide nonresidential care for grandchildren engage in more volunteering before assuming grandchild care, and their volunteerism increases after becoming a caregiver for a grandchild. DISCUSSION Consistent with resource theory and the accumulation of roles, providing nonresidential grandchild care may draw grandparents into formal volunteer activity. The lower human capital resources evidenced by grandparents raising coresidential grandchildren may play a role in their lower likelihood of formal volunteering.


Journal of Applied Gerontology | 2016

Social Supports as Enabling Factors in Nursing Home Admissions Rural, Suburban, and Urban Differences

Adrienne L. Cohen; Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda

This study investigates differences in social support and nursing home admission by rurality of residence. We use discrete-time event history models with longitudinal data from seven waves (1998-2010) of the Health and Retirement Study to prospectively examine the risk of spending 30 or more days in a nursing home (n = 5,913). Results show that elders with a health problem who live in rural areas of the South or Midwest have approximately 2 times higher odds of nursing home entry than elders living in urban areas in the Northeast. Rural elders report somewhat higher social support than non-rural elders, and controlling for these forms of social support does not explain the higher risk of a nursing home stay for Southerners and Midwesterners living in rural areas. Results suggest that social support has a similar association with nursing home entry for rural, suburban, and urban elders.


Social Science Research | 2007

Race-ethnic differences in marital quality and divorce.

Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda; Susan L. Brown


Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2005

The Significance of Nonmarital Cohabitation: Marital Status and Mental Health Benefits Among Middle-Aged and Older Adults

Susan L. Brown; Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda; Gary R. Lee


Social Science Research | 2008

Relationship violence in young adulthood: A comparison of daters, cohabitors, and marrieds

Susan L. Brown; Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda


Journal of Marriage and Family | 2012

Transitions Into and Out of Cohabitation in Later Life.

Susan L. Brown; Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda; Gary R. Lee


Journal of Family Theory and Review | 2011

Doing family, doing gender, doing religion: structured ambivalence and the religion-family connection

Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda


Social Science & Medicine | 2016

Marital quality, marital dissolution, and mortality risk during the later life course.

Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda; J. Scott Brown; Takashi Yamashita

Collaboration


Dive into the Jennifer Roebuck Bulanda's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Susan L. Brown

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adrienne L. Cohen

Georgia Southern University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gary R. Lee

Bowling Green State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhenmei Zhang

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge