TY - JOUR
T1 - Downward Neighborhood Poverty Mobility during Childhood Is Associated with Child Asthma
T2 - Evidence from the Geographic Research on Wellbeing (GROW) Survey
AU - Cantu, P.
AU - Kim, Y.
AU - Sheehan, C.
AU - Powers, D.
AU - Margerison, C. E.
AU - Cubbin, Catherine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, The New York Academy of Medicine.
PY - 2019/8/15
Y1 - 2019/8/15
N2 - Causal evidence regarding neighborhood effects on health remains tenuous. Given that children have little agency in deciding where they live and spend proportionally more of their lives in neighborhoods than adults, their exposure to neighborhood conditions could make their health particularly sensitive to neighborhood effects. In this paper, we examine the relationship between exposure to poor neighborhoods from birth to ages 4–10 and childhood asthma. We used data from the 2003–2007 California Maternal Infant and Health Assessment (MIHA) and the 2012–2013 Geographic Research on Wellbeing (GROW) survey (N = 2619 mother/child dyads) to fit relative risks of asthma for children who experience different types of neighborhood poverty mobility using Poisson regression controlling for individual-level demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, and neighborhood satisfaction. Our results demonstrate that [1] living in a poor neighborhood at baseline and follow-up and [2] moving into a poor neighborhood were each associated with higher risk of asthma, compared with children not living in a poor neighborhood at either time. Exposure to impoverished neighborhoods and downward neighborhood poverty mobility matters for children’s health, particularly for asthma. Public health practitioners and policymakers need to address downward neighborhood economic mobility, in addition to downward family economic mobility, in order to improve children’s health.
AB - Causal evidence regarding neighborhood effects on health remains tenuous. Given that children have little agency in deciding where they live and spend proportionally more of their lives in neighborhoods than adults, their exposure to neighborhood conditions could make their health particularly sensitive to neighborhood effects. In this paper, we examine the relationship between exposure to poor neighborhoods from birth to ages 4–10 and childhood asthma. We used data from the 2003–2007 California Maternal Infant and Health Assessment (MIHA) and the 2012–2013 Geographic Research on Wellbeing (GROW) survey (N = 2619 mother/child dyads) to fit relative risks of asthma for children who experience different types of neighborhood poverty mobility using Poisson regression controlling for individual-level demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, and neighborhood satisfaction. Our results demonstrate that [1] living in a poor neighborhood at baseline and follow-up and [2] moving into a poor neighborhood were each associated with higher risk of asthma, compared with children not living in a poor neighborhood at either time. Exposure to impoverished neighborhoods and downward neighborhood poverty mobility matters for children’s health, particularly for asthma. Public health practitioners and policymakers need to address downward neighborhood economic mobility, in addition to downward family economic mobility, in order to improve children’s health.
KW - Asthma
KW - Longitudinal
KW - Neighborhood effects
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85065395039&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85065395039&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11524-019-00356-2
DO - 10.1007/s11524-019-00356-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 31049846
AN - SCOPUS:85065395039
SN - 1099-3460
VL - 96
SP - 558
EP - 569
JO - Journal of Urban Health
JF - Journal of Urban Health
IS - 4
ER -