Arizona State University, School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 411 N. Central Ave., Room 600, Phoenix, AZ 85050, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2012 Nov;41(6):1515-28. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.06.005. Epub 2012 Jun 25.
Research examining the effect of neighborhoods on personal health has often focused on neighborhood disorder, or visual cues in neighborhoods perceived as personally threatening or noxious. Neighborhood disorderliness is thought to elevate individuals' fear of crime, thereby negatively impacting personal and mental health. Unfortunately, the pathways between disorder, fear of crime, and health have yet to be established. This study examines the pathways between neighborhood disorder, fear of crime, and three health outcomes. Using the Community, Crime and Health Survey, this study employs structural equation modeling to examine how general (being afraid of walking alone) and offense-specific fear of crime (being afraid of specific crimes) mediate the relationship between individuals' disorder perceptions and self-rated health, depression and anxiety. Results show that fear of crime does mediate the relationship between disorder perceptions, self-rated health and depression, though the mediating pathways are weak. This study suggests that the disorder-fear of crime-health nexus should be re-examined theoretically.
研究考察社区对个人健康的影响时,通常关注的是社区的混乱无序,或被个人视为具有威胁性或有害的社区视觉线索。人们认为社区的混乱无序会增加个人对犯罪的恐惧,从而对个人和心理健康产生负面影响。不幸的是,目前还尚未确定混乱无序、对犯罪的恐惧与健康之间的关联路径。本研究探讨了社区混乱无序、对犯罪的恐惧与三种健康结果之间的关联路径。本研究使用社区、犯罪与健康调查,采用结构方程模型来检验一般恐惧(独自步行时感到害怕)和具体犯罪恐惧(害怕特定犯罪)如何在个体对混乱无序的感知与自我报告的健康、抑郁和焦虑之间起中介作用。结果表明,犯罪恐惧确实在个体对混乱无序的感知与自我报告的健康和抑郁之间起中介作用,尽管中介路径很微弱。本研究表明,应该从理论上重新审视混乱无序-对犯罪的恐惧-健康之间的关联。