The studies described in this section examine clusters
of neighborhood characteristics and their association with health. They
use various approaches to measure neighborhood conditions. Specific studies
focus on one or more of the following: crime and violence, lighting at
night, traffic, noise, trash and litter, access to public transportation,
median income levels, median education levels, percentage of people unemployed,
percentage of home ownership, residential stability, building conditions,
air quality, places to shop, number of elderly living alone, and housing
quality.
Neighborhood problems have been found in some of the studies to
be associated in adults and youth with psychological distress, including
depression,
substance abuse, schizophrenia, and anxiety. Neighborhood problems have
also been associated with self-reported poor health, mortality, smoking-related
diseases, diabetic eye disorders, loss of function in older adults, coronary
heart disease, and low birthweight. Some studies found a linear relationship
between neighborhood conditions and health, suggesting that the effects
of place are not limited to areas with the poorest neighborhood conditions.
There is some evidence from the studies that social support may help
reduce the health risks of living in an environment with multiple problems.
Studying
the effects of clusters of neighborhood problems may yield a better understanding
of the effects of neighborhoods on health than would
isolated
risk factors. On the basis of their research, many of the authors recommend
that health improvement efforts focus on improving individual resources
and social connections, as well as the quality of neighborhoods and
overall communal life.
Aneshensel
CS, Sucoff C. The neighborhood context of adolescent mental health. Journal of Health and Social Behavior. 1996;37:293-310.
Balfour
J, Kaplan G. Neighborhood environment and loss of physical function in older
adults: evidence from the Alameda County study. American Journal of
Epidemiology. 2002;155:507-515.
Collins
JW, David RJ. Urban violence and African-American pregnancy outcome: an
ecologic study. Ethnicity and Disease. 1997;7:184-190.
Diez
Roux AV, Merkin SS, et al. Neighborhood of residence and incidence of coronary
heart disease. New England Journal of Medicine. 2001;345:99-106.
Drukker
M, Van Os J. Mediators of neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation and quality
of life. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology. 2003;38:698-706.
Eachus
J, Williams M, et al. Deprivation and cause specific morbidity: evidence
from the Somerset and Avon survey of health. British Medical Journal. 1996;312:287-292.
Eames
M, Ben-Shlomo Y, Marmot MG. Social deprivation and premature mortality:
regional comparison across England. British Medical Journal. 1993;307:1097-1102.
Fang
J, Madhavan S, Alderman MH. Low birth weight: race and maternal
nativity-impact
of community income. Pediatrics. 1999;317:749-753.
Garbarino J, Dubrow N, Kostelny
K, Pardo C. Children in Danger: Coping with the Consequences of Community
Violence. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers; 1992.
Harburg
E, et al. Socioecological stressor areas and black-white blood pressure:
Detroit. Journal of Chronic Disease. 1973;26:595-611.
Kaplan
GA. People and places: contrasting perspectives on the association between
social class and health. International Journal of Health Services. 1996;26:507-519.
Klinenberg E. Heat Wave:
A Social Autopsy of Disaster. Chicago: The University of Chicago
Press; 2002.
Krause
N. Neighborhood deterioration and self-rated health in later life. Psychology
and Aging. 1996;11:342-352.
Latkin
CA, Curry AD. Stressful neighborhoods and depression: a prospective study
of the impact of neighborhood disorder. Journal of Health and Social
Behavior. 2003;44:34-44.
Malmstrom
M, et al. Neighborhood environment and self-reported health status: a multilevel
analysis. American Journal of Public Health. 1999;89:1181-1186.
O'Campo
P, Aronson R, Johnson T. Economic, physical, and political characteristics
of neighborhood of residence and risk of low birth weight, Working Paper
WP-96-08. Baltimore, MD: Hopkins Population Center; 1996.
O'Campo
P, Xue X, Wang MC, Caughy M. Neighborhood risk factors for low birthweight
in Baltimore: a multilevel analysis. American Journal of Public Health. 1997;87:1113-1118.
Roberts
EM. Neighborhood social environments and the distribution of low birthweight
in Chicago. American Journal of Public Health. 1997;87:597-603.
Silver
E, Mulvey EP, Swanson JW. Neighborhood structural characteristics and mental
disorder: Faris and Dunham revisited. Social Science Medicine. 2002;55:1457-1470.
Steptoe
A, Feldman PJ. Neighborhood problems as sources of chronic stress: development
of a measure of neighborhood problems, and associations with socioeconomic
status and health. Annals of Behavioral Medicine. 2001;23:177-185.
Sundquist
K, Malmström M, Johansson SE. Neighbourhood deprivation and
incidence of coronary heart disease: a multilevel study of 2.6 million
women and men
in Sweden. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. 2004;58:71-77.
Yen
IH, Kaplan GA. Neighborhood social environment and 11-year risk of death:
multilevel evidence from the Alameda County study. American Journal
of Epidemiology. 1999;149:898-907.