
Olivia McEvoy
@olivia_mce
Postdoc @PruHelsinkiuni @SocSciHelsinki | PhD @TCDsociology @tcddublin | Interested in #Socialclass #Inequalities #Healthbehaviours
ID: 913068835669991425
27-09-2017 15:52:29
112 Tweet
106 Followers
352 Following

How lockdown highlighted educational inequality in Ireland – new research theconversation.com/how-lockdown-h… A summary of key findings and implications of a recent collaboration with Children's School Lives and Interdisciplinary Child Well-Being Network colleagues (via The Conversation)





📢📢📢New #OpenAccess paper in Computers in Human Behavior "Digital engagement and its association with adverse psychiatric symptoms: A longitudinal cohort study utilizing latent class analysis" by R Brannigan et al (including Olivia McEvoy and Richard Layte from TCD Sociology)



Timely presentations from RCSI TCD Sociology Queen's University Belfast 🎓 on reducing #healthinequalities at the "Reducing Health Inequalities in Ireland" workshop, yesterday. Delighted to contribute our research (in the form of a poster) to the event! Richard Layte Debbi Stanistreet


📢 Our new publication TCD Sociology in Journal of Adolescent Health. Using data from HBSC Study, our results show that gender differences in #adolescent #bullying share a robust association with societal #gender #inequality (GII). sciencedirect.com/science/articl…!

We examined the role of a young person's social environment in explaining inequalities in physical-activity trajectories using GrowingUpinIreland data. Our new #OpenAccess paper is available in SSM-Population Health doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmp… Richard Layte Debbi Stanistreet TCD Sociology


Interested in how a young person's social environment explains inequalities in their physical activities? Check out this great paper! GrowingUpinIreland Olivia McEvoy Richard Layte Debbi Stanistreet TCD Sociology

👉NEW paper by TCD Sociology PhD candidate Olivia McEvoy in SSM-Population Health underscores the role of family characteristics in children's physical activity trajectories in Ireland. Data from GrowingUpinIreland. #OpenAccess sciencedirect.com/science/articl…



📢New research from #teenpath Richard Layte Debbi Stanistreet Demonstrating the relative importance of early life, physical activity, sedentarism and diet in explaining SEP differentials in BMI and obesity trajectories from ages 9 to 17/18. doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmp…

Video: PWO Ireland PhD researchers/workers take protest to Dáil Éireann irishtimes.com/video/video/20…

Delighted to attend #SLLS2024 again this year to present our ( Richard Layte ) research on social exclusion and health behaviours using GrowingUpinIreland data. Thanks to all who attended and gave valuable feedback! @SLLShome SLLS Early Career Researchers


🆕 #OpenAccess article in Sociology of Health and Illness Journal using GrowingUpinIreland data to compare individual and structural-level explanations for inequalities in smoking Richard Layte TCD Sociology Findings support for the 'smoking exposure' and 'social resistance' model, see: doi.org/10.1111/1467-9…


Exciting new research comparing individual-level and structural-level explanations for inequalities in smoking during middle childhood and adolescence from Olivia McEvoy (Helsinki Institute Demography & Population Health) Richard Layte (TCD Sociology)

🥳Congratulations to Olivia McEvoy on her successful viva at Trinity College Dublin TCD Sociology yesterday! 🎉 Olivia's PhD thesis examined the social and economic patterning of health behaviours in childhood and adolescence, using data from GrowingUpinIreland. @PruHelsinkiuni Faculty of Social Sciences, HelsinkiUni