1. Neighborhood social organization exposures and racial/ethnic disparities in hypertension risk in Los Angeles
- Author
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Sharp, Gregory and Carpiano, Richard M
- Subjects
Epidemiology ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Human Geography ,Hypertension ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Cardiovascular ,Adult ,Humans ,Collective Efficacy ,Los Angeles ,Neighborhood Characteristics ,Racial Groups ,Health Status Disparities ,Ethnicity ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Despite a growing evidence base documenting associations between neighborhood characteristics and the risk of developing high blood pressure, little work has established the role played by neighborhood social organization exposures in racial/ethnic disparities in hypertension risk. There is also ambiguity around prior estimates of neighborhood effects on hypertension prevalence, given the lack of attention paid to individuals' exposures to both residential and nonresidential spaces. This study contributes to the neighborhoods and hypertension literature by using novel longitudinal data from the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey to construct exposure-weighted measures of neighborhood social organization characteristics-organizational participation and collective efficacy-and examine their associations with hypertension risk, as well as their relative contributions to racial/ethnic differences in hypertension. We also assess whether the hypertension effects of neighborhood social organization vary across our sample of Black, Latino, and White adults. Results from random effects logistic regression models indicate that adults living in neighborhoods where people are highly active in informal and formal organizations have a lower probability of being hypertensive. This protective effect of exposure to neighborhood organizational participation is also significantly stronger for Black adults than Latino and White adults, such that, at high levels of neighborhood organizational participation, the observed Black-White and Black-Latino hypertension differences are substantially reduced to nonsignificance. Nonlinear decomposition results also indicate that almost one-fifth of the Black-White hypertension gap can be explained by differential exposures to neighborhood social organization.
- Published
- 2023