Neighborhood environment and self-reported health status: A multilevel analysis

Citation
M. Malmstrom et al., Neighborhood environment and self-reported health status: A multilevel analysis, AM J PUB HE, 89(8), 1999, pp. 1181-1186
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science","Envirnomentale Medicine & Public Health","Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
ISSN journal
00900036 → ACNP
Volume
89
Issue
8
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1181 - 1186
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-0036(199908)89:8<1181:NEASHS>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Objectives. This study examined whether neighborhood socioeconomic environm ent helps to explain the proportion of community members with self-reported poor health status. Methods. A random sample of 9240 persons aged 25 to 74 years were interview ed during 1988 and 1989. The socioeconomic environment of each respondent's neighborhood was measured with the Care Need index (CNI) and the Townsend score. The data were analyzed with a multilevel model adjusted for the inde pendent variables. The second-level variables were the 2 neighborhood score s. Results. There was a clear gradient for poor health and education within ev ery CNI interval so that with an increasing CNI (indicating more deprivatio n), the prevalence of poor health increased in all 3 education groups (P = .001). in the full model, decreasing educational level, obesity, length and frequency of smoking, physical inactivity, and increasing CNI were associa ted with poor health. Persons living in the most deprived neighborhoods had a prevalence ratio of 1.69 (95% confidence interval = 1.44, 1.98) for poor health compared with those living in the most affluent areas. Conclusions. Both neighborhood socioeconomic environment and individual edu cational status are associated with self-reported poor health.