Social Status & Health Publications

Chen, E.,Miller, G.E., Lachman, M.E., Gruenewald, T.L., Karlamangla, A.S., & Seeman, T.E. (2012). Protective factors for adults from low childhood socioeconomic circumstances: The benefits of shift-and-persist for allostatic load. Psychosomatic Medicine, 74, 178-186. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31824206fd Link

Gruenewald, T.L., Karlamangla, A.S., Merkin, S.S., Crandall, C., Koretz, B., & Seeman, T.E. (2012). History of socioeconomic disadvantage and multi-system physiological health in later life. Social Science and Medicine, 74, 75-83. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.09.037 Link

Miller, G.E., Lachman, M.E., Chen, E., Gruenewald, T.L., Karlamangla, A.S., & Seeman, T.E. (2011). Pathways to resilience: Maternal nurturance as a buffer against the effects of childhood poverty on metabolic syndrome at midlife. Psychological Science, 22(12), 1591-1599. doi:10.1177/0956797611419170 Link

​Slopen, N., Lewis, T.T., Gruenewald, T.L., Mujahid, M.S., Ryff, C.D., Wilkins, D.R. (2010). Early life adversity and inflammation in African Americans and Whites in the Midlife in the United States Survey. Psychosomatic Medicine, 72(7), 694-701. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3181e9c16f Link

​Gruenewald, T.L., Cohen, S. Mathews, K.A., Tracy, R., Seeman, T.E. (2009). Association of socioeconomic status with inflammation markers in black and white men and women in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study. Social Science and Medicine, 69: 451-459. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.05.018 Link

Gruenewald, T.L., Kemeny, M.E., & Aziz, A. (2006). Subjective social status as a moderator of cortisol responses to social threat. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 20(4), 410-419. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2005.11.005 Link

​Seeman, T.E., Crimmins, E., Singer, B., Bucur, A., Huang, M., Gruenewald, T.L., Berkman, L.F., & Reuben, D.B. (2004). Cumulative biological risk and socio-economic differences in mortality: MacArthur studies of successful aging. Social Science and Medicine, 58, 1985-1997. doi:10.1016/S0277-9536(03)00402-7 Link

​Gruenewald, T.L., Seeman, T.E., Karlamangla, A.S., Friedman, E., & Evans, W. (2012). Biological imprints of social status: Socioeconomic gradients in biological markers of disease risk. In B. Wolfe, B. Evans, & T. Seeman (Eds.) Biological Consequences of Socioeconomic Inequalities. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.

Friedman, E.M., Karlamangla, A.S., Gruenewald, T., Koretz, B. & Seeman, T.E. (in press). Early life adversity and adult biological risk profiles. Psychosomatic Medicine.

​Ong, A., Williams, D.R., Nwizu, U., & ​Gruenewald, T.L.​ (2017). Everyday Unfair Treatment and Multisystem Biological Dysregulation in African American Adults. ​Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology,​ 23(1), 27-35.

​*Robinette, J.W., Charles, S.T., & ​Gruenewald, T.L.​ (2017). Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status and Health: A Longitudinal Analysis. Journal of Community Health, 42(5), 865-871.

​Ziliolo, S., Imami, L., Ong, A.D., Lumley, M.A., & Gruenewald, T.L.​ (2017). Discrimination and anger control as pathways linking socioeconomic disadvantage to allostatic load in midlife. ​Journal of Psychomatic Research, 103, ​83-90. doi:10.1016/j.jpsychores.2017.10.002