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Dive into the research topics where Kate E. Fothergill is active.

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Featured researches published by Kate E. Fothergill.


Journal of Health and Social Behavior | 2009

Pathways to Adult Marijuana and Cocaine Use: A Prospective Study of African Americans from Age 6 to 42

Kate E. Fothergill; Margaret E. Ensminger; Kerry M. Green; Judith A. Robertson; Hee Soon Juon

This study examines pathways to adult marijuana and cocaine use in a cohort of African Americans from Woodlawn, an inner city community in Chicago. Assessments were conducted in first grade (age 6), adolescence (age 16), early adulthood (age 32), and in mid-adulthood (age 42). The “social adaptation life course” framework guided the focus on social adaptation, social bonds, and economic resources as predictors of adult drug use. Results indicate that more frequent substance use in adolescence and lower-income and less-frequent church attendance in early adulthood increase the risk of mid-life drug use. Shyness in first grade related inversely to later cocaine use and marijuana use (marginally significant). Indirect pathways to drug use also were identified. Gender differences were not significant. The findings show continuities in social maladaptation over time and the importance of social integration and economic resources in the early adult years.


Addictive Behaviors | 2012

Childhood and adolescent risk factors for comorbid depression and substance use disorders in adulthood

Kerry M. Green; Katarzyna A. Zebrak; Kate E. Fothergill; Judith A. Robertson; Margaret E. Ensminger

The comorbidity of major depression and substance use disorders is well documented. However, thorough understanding of prevalence and early risk factors for comorbidity in adulthood is lacking, particularly among urban African Americans. With data from the Woodlawn Study, which follows a community cohort of urban African Americans from ages 6 to 42, we identify the prevalence of comorbidity and childhood and adolescent risk factors of comorbid depression and substance use disorders, depression alone, and substance use disorders alone. Prevalence of comorbid substance use disorders and major depression in adulthood is 8.3% overall. Comorbidity in cohort men is twice that for women (11.1% vs. 5.7%). Adjusted multinomial regression models found few differences in risk factors for comorbidity compared to either major depression or a substance use disorder on its own. However, results do suggest distinct risk factors for depression without a substance use disorder in adulthood compared to a substance use disorder without depression in adulthood. In particular, low socioeconomic status and family conflict was related to increased risk of developing major depression in adulthood, while dropping out of high school was a statistically significant predictor of adult-onset substance use disorders. Early onset of marijuana use differentiated those with a substance use disorder with or without depression from those with depression without a substance use disorder in adjusted models. In conclusion, comorbid substance use disorders and depression are highly prevalent among these urban African Americans. Insight into the unique childhood and adolescent risk factors for depression compared to substance use disorders is critical to intervention development in urban communities. Results suggest that these programs must consider individual behaviors, as well as the early family dynamic.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2012

Interrelationship of substance use and psychological distress over the life course among a cohort of urban African Americans.

Kerry M. Green; Katarzyna A. Zebrak; Judith A. Robertson; Kate E. Fothergill; Margaret E. Ensminger

BACKGROUND Substance use and psychological problems are major public health issues because of their high prevalence, co-occurrence, clustering in socio-economically disadvantaged groups, and serious consequences. However, their interrelationship over time is not well understood. METHODS This study identifies and compares the developmental epidemiology from age 6 to 42 of substance use and psychological distress in a population of African American men and women. Data come from the Woodlawn study, a longitudinal study of an urban community cohort followed since 1966. We use structural equation modeling to examine pathways between substance use (i.e., alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine) and psychological distress over time by gender. RESULTS We find significant continuity from adolescence to midlife for substance use and for psychological distress, as well as significant correlations within time periods between substance use and psychological distress, particularly among women. We also find greater adolescent substance use predicts psychological distress in young adulthood for men, but no cross-lag associations for women. Womens adolescent psychological distress and substance use are linked uniquely to that of their mothers. Findings show additional gender differences in the developmental etiology of substance use and psychological distress. CONCLUSIONS Findings demonstrate the continuity of substance use and psychological distress over time; the contemporaneous relationships between psychological distress and substance use within time periods, and minimal cross-lagged relationships. Findings also show that adolescent substance use may set boys on a pathway of long-term psychological distress, thus adding to evidence of negative consequences of frequent use.


Academic Pediatrics | 2013

Assessing the Impact of a Web-Based Comprehensive Somatic and Mental Health Screening Tool in Pediatric Primary Care

Kate E. Fothergill; Anne Gadomski; Barry S. Solomon; Ardis L. Olson; Cecelia A. Gaffney; Susan dosReis; Lawrence S. Wissow

OBJECTIVE To evaluate how parents and physicians perceive the utility of a comprehensive, electronic previsit screener, and to assess its impact on the visit. METHODS A mixed methods design was used. English-speaking parents were recruited from 3 primary care systems (urban MD and rural NY and VT) when they presented for a well-child visit with a child 4 to 10 years of age. Parents completed an electronic previsit screen, which included somatic concerns, health risks, and 4 mental health tools (SCARED5, PHQ-2, SDQ Impact, and PSC-17). Parents completed an exit survey, and a subset were interviewed. All primary care providers (PCPs) were interviewed. RESULTS A total of 120 parents and 16 PCPs participated. The exit surveys showed that nearly 90% of parents agreed or strongly agreed that the screener was easy to use and maintained confidentiality. During interviews, parents noted that the screener helped with recall, validated concerns, reframed issues they thought might not be appropriate for primary care, and raised new questions. PCPs thought that the screener enabled them to normalize sensitive issues, and it permitted them to simultaneously focus and be comprehensive during the visit. Parents and PCPs agreed that the screener helped guide discussion, promoted in-depth exchange, and increased efficiency. Findings were consistent across quantitative and qualitative methods and between parents and PCPs. CONCLUSIONS A comprehensive electronic previsit screening tool is an acceptable and practical strategy to facilitate well-child visits. It may help with problem identification as well as with setting agendas, engaging the family, and balancing attention between somatic and psychosocial concerns.


Journal of Family Issues | 2012

Marriage Trajectories and Health Risk Behaviors Throughout Adulthood Among Urban African Americans

Kerry M. Green; Elaine Eggleston Doherty; Kate E. Fothergill; Margaret E. Ensminger

Although previous studies have identified a protective effect of marriage on risky health behaviors, gaps remain in our understanding of how marriage improves health, particularly among African Americans. This study uses longitudinal data to take selection into account and examines whether marital trajectories that incorporate timing, stability, and duration of marriage affect health risk behaviors among a community cohort of urban African Americans followed for 35 years (N = 1,049). For both men and women, we find six marital trajectories. Men and women in consistently married trajectories are less likely to smoke, drink heavily (women only), and use illegal drugs than those in unmarried or previously married trajectories. Late marrying men do not fare worse in midlife than men in earlier marrying trajectories, but late marrying women show increased risk of midlife drug use. Results suggest policies supporting marriage may have an impact on health but only if stable unions are achieved.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2012

A Prospective Study of Childhood and Adolescent Antecedents of Homelessness among a Community Population of African Americans

Kate E. Fothergill; Elaine Eggleston Doherty; Judith A. Robertson; Margaret E. Ensminger

Much is known about contemporaneous correlates of homelessness from studies of homeless individuals. However, few studies have prospectively examined early antecedents and prevalence of homelessness in community populations. We use data from a 35-year study of a community population of African Americans to examine relationships between homelessness and prior structural, family, school, and behavioral influences. Nearly 22% of males and 16% of females reported homelessness between ages 15 and 42, providing a rare estimate within an African American urban community population. In bivariate analyses, lower school bonds, depressed mood, violent behavior, and running away in adolescence are predictive for both males and females. Teen parenting and angry mood are unique influences for females, while for males, poor first grade classroom conduct and adolescent substance use are unique risks. In multivariate analyses, poor classroom conduct and weaker school bonds predict homelessness among males, while teen parenting does so for females. Running away before age 15 is strongly predictive of later homelessness for both males and females. These results reveal the relative influence of multiple, interrelated early risks on homelessness and confirm our hypothesis that factors linked to other poor outcomes also relate to homelessness, underscoring another benefit to early prevention efforts.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2010

Welfare Receipt Trajectories of African-American Women Followed for 30 Years

Hee Soon Juon; Kerry M. Green; Kate E. Fothergill; Judith D. Kasper; Roland J. Thorpe; Margaret E. Ensminger

Although there has been much discussion about the persistence of poverty and welfare receipt among child-rearing women in the US, little is known about long-term patterns of poverty and welfare receipt or what differentiates those who remain on welfare from those who do not. Furthermore, are there distinctions between child-rearing women who are poor but not on welfare from those who do receive welfare? This study examined trajectories of welfare receipt and poverty among African-American women (n = 680) followed from 1966 to 1997. A semiparametric group-based approach revealed four trajectories of welfare receipt: no welfare (64.2%), early leavers (12.7%), late leavers (10.1%), and persistent welfare recipients (10.1%). The “no welfare” group was further divided into a poverty group and a not poverty group to distinguish predictors of welfare from predictors of poverty. Multivariate analyses revealed differences in predictors of trajectory groups in terms of education, physical and psychological health, and social integration. In addition, earlier chronic illness and social integration were important predictors to differentiate between long-term users (i.e., late leavers, persistent recipients) and short-term users (i.e., early leavers). Trajectories did not differ in teenage motherhood, substance use, or family history of welfare receipt. Implications for public policy are discussed.


Archive | 2016

The Crossover Effect: The Influence of Social Roles in an African American Cohort

Margaret E. Ensminger; Kate E. Fothergill; Elaine Eggleston Doherty; Kerry M. Green; Judy Robertson; Hee Soon Juon

Despite some stereotypes that may exist, substance use among African American adolescents is generally comparable to or somewhat less than use among White populations. However, evidence of a pattern shift emerges as they age into adulthood, when African Americans, compared to Whites, are more likely to initiate drug use and develop problem use, and are less likely to terminate their drug use (French et al. 2002). In this chapter, we evaluate the crossover effect in a cohort of African Americans studied from ages six to 42 from the Woodlawn Study (N=1242). Using data from the Woodlawn cohort and national surveys administered at times corresponding to the three Woodlawn assessments we show evidence of cross-over: lower use of drugs for African Americans during adolescence; increasing use (relative to Whites) over adulthood; and higher reported abuse in adulthood. We examined whether one reason for higher drug use among the Woodlawn cohort relates to their lower likelihood of participating in the expected central social roles of mid life, especially, marriage and employment. Woodlawn men and women had even lower participation in these roles than national African Americans. We found that patterns of cocaine use over the life course as shown in trajectory analyses were related to social role involvement in adolescence, young adulthood, and mid adulthood. Marriage and employment may have steered cohort members away from their cocaine use, or if they were not cocaine users helped to keep them from becoming cocaine users. It is consistent with the possibility that the adoption of these adult social roles is an important turning point with regard to drug use.


Journal of Health and Social Behavior | 2016

Pathways from Early Childhood Adversity to Later Adult Drug Use and Psychological Distress: A Prospective Study of a Cohort of African Americans

Kate E. Fothergill; Margaret E. Ensminger; Elaine Eggleston Doherty; Hee Soon Juon; Kerry M. Green

Drawing on the life course perspective, this research addresses the direct and indirect pathways between childhood adversity and midlife psychological distress and drug use across a majority of the life span in an African American cohort (N = 1,242) followed from age 6 to 42 (1966 to 2002). Results from structural equation models highlight the impact of low childhood socioeconomic status (SES), poor maternal mental health, and the role of first-grade maladaptation in launching a trajectory of social maladaptation from age 6 to 42. Specifically, for men, we found a direct pathway from early low SES to drug use in mid adulthood and an indirect pathway to psychological distress through first-grade maladaptation and adolescent poor mental health. For females, early SES affected first-grade maladaptation and low school bonds, which then predicted later drug use.


Academic Pediatrics | 2017

Surveillance or Engagement: Children's Conflicts During Health Maintenance Visits

Sarah Polk; Russell Horwitz; Shaina Longway; Alfonso Bonilla; Kate E. Fothergill; Marc S. Karver; Peter Salmon; Lawrence S. Wissow

OBJECTIVE School-aged health maintenance visits seek to prevent or intervene early with health issues of lifelong importance. Little is known about what children expect to happen in these visits or how they experience them, factors related to their engagement as active collaborators in care. METHODS Thirty children (53% Latino, 27% African-American, and 20% white) ages 7 to 11 years were video recorded during a health maintenance visit and then interviewed while reviewing the videos. Interview transcripts were analyzed for understanding the purpose of the visit, feelings of comfort and discomfort, and decisions about how much to participate. RESULTS Children expected doctors to be helpful, caring, and a source of important information. They anticipated visits to include immunizations, a physical examination, and praise for accomplishments, but could be surprised by questions about behavior, family function, and lifestyle. During visits, feelings varied from warmth toward providers to embarrassment, wariness, irritation, and boredom. Even when bored or irritated, children hesitated to interrupt parent-provider conversations or correct perceived provider misunderstandings, not wanting to be seen as inappropriate or rude. When asked questions they considered off topic, likely to reveal sensitive information, or that could lead to changes in their lifestyle, some were silent or answered evasively. Some said they would have spoken more freely without their parent present but valued parental support and wanted parents to make important decisions. CONCLUSIONS School-aged childrens limited knowledge of what to expect in health maintenance visits, uncertainty about conversational norms with adults, and desire to assert control over their lives compete with their desire to access expert advice and form bonds with providers. Engaging children in health maintenance visits might require more relationship-building and education about the visits goals.

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Hee Soon Juon

Thomas Jefferson University

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Elaine Eggleston Doherty

University of Missouri–St. Louis

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Judy Robertson

Johns Hopkins University

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Peter Salmon

University of Liverpool

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