Elizabeth J. Mutran
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
63 Papers
808 Citations
Elizabeth J. Mutran is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social support & Ethnic group. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 63 publications. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth J. Mutran include North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services & University of Michigan.
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Papers
Effect of satisfaction with one's abilities on positive and negative affect among individuals with recently diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis.
TL;DR: Study findings indicate that dissatisfaction with illness-related abilities can exacerbate psychologic distress, and highlight the need for research examining the role that positive affect plays in adaptation to RA.
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Middle-aged working men and women: Similar and different paths to self-esteem.
TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that middle-aged working women lack the material resources and status of men but do not have lower mean self-esteem scores than men, and different sets of social-background, activity, and worker- and spouse-identity variables influence selfesteem for men and women.
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Childbearing History and Self-Reported Well-Being in Later Life
Elizabeth J. Mutran,Ishan C. Williams,Chirayath M. Suchindran +2 more
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how numbers of live births and pregnancy losses affected the self-rated health and depressive symptoms of women aged 50 years and older, contrasting African Americans and Whites.
•Journal Article
The effect of Channeling on in-home utilization and subsequent nursing home care: a simultaneous equation perspective.
TL;DR: This study shows why Channeling did not have a large total impact on nursing home utilization and provides evidence of direct substitution of in-home care for nursing home care.
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The Effect of Channeling on Home Care Utilization and Satisfaction With Care
TL;DR: It was hypothesized that participation in the two Channeling interventions would indirectly enhance satisfaction by operating through the increased use of formal in-home care, but both Channeling models were found to have favorable direct and indirect effects on patient satisfaction.
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