Sam Parsons
Institute of Education
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sam Parsons.
International Journal of Epidemiology | 2016
David Bann; Mark Hamer; Sam Parsons; George B. Ploubidis; Alice Sullivan
Abstract Background: Attending private school or a higher-status university is thought to benefit future earnings and occupational opportunities. We examined whether these measures were beneficially related to health and selected health-related behaviours in midlife. Methods: Data were from up to 9799 participants from the 1970 British birth Cohort Study. The high school attended (private, grammar or state) was ascertained at 16 years, and the university attended reported at 42 years [categorised as either higher (Russell Group) or normal-status institutions]. Self-reported health, limiting illness and body mass index (BMI) were reported at 42 years, along with television viewing, take-away meal consumption, physical inactivity, smoking and high risk alcohol drinking. Associations were examined using multiple regression models, adjusted for gender and childhood socioeconomic, health and cognitive measures. Results: Private school and higher status university attendance were associated with favourable self-rated health and lower BMI, and beneficially associated with health-related-behaviours. For example, private school attendance was associated with 0.56 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.48, 0.65] odds of lower self-rated health [odds ratio (OR) for higher-status university: 0.32 (0.27, 0.37)]. Associations were largely attenuated by adjustment for potential confounders, except for those of private schooling and higher-status university attendance with lower BMI and television viewing, and less frequent take-away meal consumption. Conclusions: Private school and higher-status university attendance were related to better self-rated health, lower BMI and multiple favourable health behaviours in midlife. Findings suggest that type or status of education may be an important under-researched construct to consider when documenting and understanding socioeconomic inequalities in health.
Community, Work & Family | 2018
Heather Elliott; Sam Parsons; Julia Brannen; Jane Elliott; Ann Phoenix
ABSTRACT The paper examines how in Britain the time fathers and couples spend in employment shifts in the first years of children’s lives, the conditions under which this happens and how fathers feel about and experience time with their families and time in paid work. In order to achieve these aims new longitudinal analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) is carried out together with secondary analysis of narrative case studies drawn from a qualitative study of Fatherhood across the Generations. By linking these datasets the paper examines the potential for corroboration and complementarity between different types of data. Further, it seeks to show how qualitative cases corroborate, elaborate and expand on the main employment trajectories in the MCS population of fathers and how these extend understandings of fathers’ experience of time within families.
National Research and Development Centre for adult literacy and numeracy, Institute of Education, University of London: London. | 2005
John Bynner; Sam Parsons
Literacy and Numeracy studies | 2005
Sam Parsons; John Bynner
In: Ferri, E. and Bynner, J. and Wadsworth, Michael and Wadsworth, M.E., (eds.) Changing Britain, changing lives : three generations at the turn of the century. Institute of Education, University of London: London. (2003) | 2003
Sam Parsons; John Bynner
The Basic Skills Agency: London. (2002) | 2002
Sam Parsons; John Bynner
National Research and Development Centre for adult literacy and numeracy, Institute of Education, University of London: London. | 2006
John Bynner; Sam Parsons
Archive | 2010
Jane Elliott; Andrew Miles; Sam Parsons; Mike Savage
UNSPECIFIED (2011) | 2011
Jane Elliott; Sam Parsons; Mike Savage; Andrew Miles
Archive | 2011
Jane Elliott; Catharine R. Gale; Diana Kuh; Sam Parsons