There is growing recognition that neighborhood context contributes to the h
ealth and well-being of residents over and above individual characteristics
and health behaviors. However, few published reports exist of methods for
documenting neighborhood characteristics which are easily administered with
minimal outlay of resources. In this paper, we present the development of
a brief observational method for urban neighborhoods relevant to the health
and well-being of families and children. Data from a socieconomically dive
rse group of urban neighborhoods are used to create theoretically grounded
measures of neighborhood context, and the utility of these measures for dis
criminating between and within urban neighborhoods is demonstrated. (C) 200
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