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Direct observation of neighborhood attributes in an urban area of the US south: characterizing the social context of pregnancy.

Authors :
Laraia, Barbara A
Laraia, Barbara A
Messer, Lynne
Kaufman, Jay S
Dole, Nancy
Caughy, Margaret
O'Campo, Patricia
Savitz, David A
Laraia, Barbara A
Laraia, Barbara A
Messer, Lynne
Kaufman, Jay S
Dole, Nancy
Caughy, Margaret
O'Campo, Patricia
Savitz, David A
Source :
International journal of health geographics; vol 5, iss 1, 11; 1476-072X
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

BackgroundNeighborhood characteristics have been associated with poor maternal and child health outcomes, yet conceptualization of potential mechanisms is still needed. Census data have long served as proxies for area level socioeconomic influences. Unique information captured by neighborhood inventories, mostly conducted in northern US and Canadian urban areas, has shown important aspects of the community environment that are not captured by the socioeconomic and demographic aggregated individual statistics of census data. In this paper, we describe a neighborhood data collection effort tailored to a southern urban area.MethodsThis study used data from the Pregnancy, Nutrition and Infection (PIN) prospective cohort study to describe neighborhoods where low- and moderate-income pregnant women reside. Women who participated in the PIN study and who resided in Raleigh, NC and its surrounding suburbs were included (n = 703). Neighborhood attributes captured by the inventory included litter, housing condition, road condition, and social interactions that informed theoretical constructs of physical incivility, territoriality and social spaces. US Housing and Population Census 2000 data at the block group level were also assessed to identify the unique contribution of directly observed data. We hypothesize that neighborhood environments can influence health through psychosocial mediated pathways that lead to increased stress, or through disadvantage leading to poor neighborhood resources, or by protective attributes through increased social control.ResultsFindings suggest that directly observed neighborhood attributes distinguished between different types of areas in which low-income pregnant non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black women lived. Theoretically informed scales of physical incivilities, territoriality and social spaces were constructed and found to be internally consistent. Scales were weakly associated indicating that these constructs capture distinct info

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
International journal of health geographics; vol 5, iss 1, 11; 1476-072X
Notes :
application/pdf, International journal of health geographics vol 5, iss 1, 11 1476-072X
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367433360
Document Type :
Electronic Resource