Children's Environmental Health Initiative, School of Natural Resources and Environment and Department of Pediatrics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2012 Mar;120(3):471-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1103578. Epub 2011 Dec 2.
The built environment, a key component of environmental health, may be an important contributor to health disparities, particularly for reproductive health outcomes.
In this study we investigated the relationship between seven indices of residential built environment quality and adverse reproductive outcomes for the City of Durham, North Carolina (USA).
We surveyed approximately 17,000 residential tax parcels in central Durham, assessing > 50 individual variables on each. These data, collected using direct observation, were combined with tax assessor, public safety, and U.S. Census data to construct seven indices representing important domains of the residential built environment: housing damage, property disorder, security measures, tenure (owner or renter occupied), vacancy, crime count, and nuisance count. Fixed-slope random-intercept multilevel models estimated the association between the residential built environment and five adverse birth outcomes. Models were adjusted for maternal characteristics and clustered at the primary adjacency community unit, defined as the index block, plus all adjacent blocks that share any portion of a line segment (block boundary) or vertex.
Five built environment indices (housing damage, property disorder, tenure, vacancy, and nuisance count) were associated with each of the five outcomes in the unadjusted context: preterm birth, small for gestational age (SGA), low birth weight (LBW), continuous birth weight, and birth weight percentile for gestational age (BWPGA; sex-specific birth weight distributions for infants delivered at each gestational age using National Center for Health Statistics referent births for 2000-2004). However, some estimates were attenuated after adjustment. In models adjusted for individual-level covariates, housing damage remained statistically significantly associated with SGA, birth weight, and BWPGA.
This work suggests a real and meaningful relationship between the quality of the residential built environment and birth outcomes, which we argue are a good measure of general community health.
建筑环境是环境健康的一个重要组成部分,它可能是造成健康差异的一个重要因素,尤其是对生殖健康结果而言。
本研究旨在调查北卡罗来纳州达勒姆市(美国)的 7 项住宅建筑环境质量指标与不良生殖结局之间的关系。
我们调查了达勒姆市中心约 17000 个住宅税区,对每个税区评估了>50 个单独变量。这些数据是通过直接观察收集的,并与税务评估员、公共安全和美国人口普查数据相结合,构建了代表住宅建筑环境重要领域的 7 个指数:房屋损坏、财产混乱、安全措施、保有权(业主或租户居住)、空置、犯罪计数和滋扰计数。固定斜率随机截距多水平模型估计了住宅建筑环境与 5 种不良出生结局之间的关联。模型调整了母亲的特征,并按主要相邻社区单元进行了聚类,定义为索引块加上所有共享线段(块边界)或顶点的任何部分的相邻块。
在未调整的情况下,5 个建筑环境指数(房屋损坏、财产混乱、保有权、空置和滋扰计数)与 5 种结局中的每一种都存在关联:早产、小于胎龄儿(SGA)、低出生体重(LBW)、连续出生体重和出生体重百分位(按胎龄的出生体重分布,适用于每个胎龄的婴儿,使用 2000-2004 年国家卫生统计中心参考出生的性别特异性出生体重分布)。然而,在调整了个体水平协变量后,一些估计值减弱了。在调整了个体水平协变量的模型中,房屋损坏与 SGA、出生体重和 BWPGA 仍存在统计学显著关联。
这项工作表明,住宅建筑环境质量与出生结局之间存在真实而有意义的关系,我们认为出生结局是衡量一般社区健康的一个很好的指标。