Title of article
Socioeconomic domains and associations with preterm birth
Author/Authors
Lynne C. Messer، نويسنده , , Lisa C. Vinikoor، نويسنده , , Barbara A. Laraia، نويسنده , , Jay S. Kaufman، نويسنده , , Janet Eyster، نويسنده , , Claudia Holzman، نويسنده , , Jennifer Culhane، نويسنده , , Irma Elo، نويسنده , , Jessica G. Burke، نويسنده , , Patricia OʹCampo، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
11
From page
1247
To page
1257
Abstract
Neighborhood socioeconomic effects on health have been estimated using multiple variables and indices. This inconsistent estimation approach makes comparison across geographic areas challenging. In this paper, we developed indices representing specific socioeconomic domains that can be reproduced in other areas to estimate elements of the neighborhood socioeconomic environment on health outcomes, specifically preterm birth. Using year 2000 U.S. census data and principal components analysis, socioeconomic indices were developed representing a priori – defined domains of education, employment, housing, occupation, poverty and residential stability. These socioeconomic indices were subsequently used in race-stratified multilevel logistic regression models of preterm birth in eight socioeconomically distinct study areas in the U.S. Maternal residence was obtained from birth records and was geocoded to census tracts. In maternal age and education adjusted models, living in tracts with high unemployment, low education, poor housing, low proportion of managerial or professional occupation and high poverty was associated with increased odds of preterm birth for non-Hispanic white women at most sites. Among non-Hispanic black women, similar associations were noted for tract-level low education, high unemployment, low occupation, and high poverty, but the effect estimates were generally smaller than those seen for white women. Increasing amounts of residential stability were not associated with preterm birth in these analyses. We combined the domain estimates across the eight study sites to produce pooled effect estimates for the socioeconomic domains on preterm birth. The research reported here suggests that specific neighborhood-level socioeconomic features may be especially influential to health outcomes. These socioeconomic domains represent potential targets for intervention or policy efforts designed to improve maternal and child health and reduce health disparities.
Keywords
USANeighborhood effectsRacial inequalitiesPreterm birthSocioeconomic domainsMultilevel modeling
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
603982
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