Byck Gayle R, Bolland John, Dick Danielle, Swann Gregory, Henry David, Mustanski Brian
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
College of Human Environmental Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2015 Nov;56(11):1185-93. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12386. Epub 2015 Feb 6.
This study examined whether relocating from a high-poverty neighborhood to a lower poverty neighborhood as part of a federal housing relocation program (HOPE VI; Housing Opportunities for People Everywhere) had effects on adolescent mental and behavioral health compared to adolescents consistently living in lower poverty neighborhoods.
Sociodemographic, risk behavior, and neighborhood data were collected from 592 low-income, primarily African-American adolescents and their primary caregivers. Structured psychiatric interviews were conducted with adolescents. Prerelocation neighborhood, demographic, and risk behavior data were also included. Hierarchical Linear Modeling (HLM) was used to test associations between neighborhood variables and risk outcomes. HLM was used to test whether the effect of neighborhood relocation and neighborhood characteristics might explain differences in sexual risk taking, substance use, and mental health outcomes.
Adolescents who relocated of HOPE VI neighborhoods (n = 158) fared worse than control group participants (n = 429) on most self-reported mental health outcomes. The addition of subjective neighborhood measures generally did not substantively change these results.
Our findings suggest that moving from a high-poverty neighborhood to a somewhat lower poverty neighborhood is not associated with better mental health and risk behavior outcomes in adolescents. The continued effects of having grown up in a high-poverty neighborhood, the small improvements in their new neighborhoods, the comparatively short length of time they lived in their new neighborhood, and/or the stress of moving appears to worsen most of the mental health outcomes of HOPE VI compared to control group participants who consistently lived in the lower poverty neighborhoods.
本研究调查了作为联邦住房搬迁计划(希望六号;人人享有住房机会)的一部分,从高贫困社区搬迁至贫困程度较低的社区,与一直生活在贫困程度较低社区的青少年相比,对青少年心理和行为健康是否有影响。
收集了592名低收入、主要为非裔美国青少年及其主要照顾者的社会人口学、风险行为和社区数据。对青少年进行了结构化精神病学访谈。还纳入了搬迁前的社区、人口统计学和风险行为数据。采用分层线性模型(HLM)来检验社区变量与风险结果之间的关联。HLM用于检验社区搬迁和社区特征的影响是否可以解释性风险行为、物质使用和心理健康结果的差异。
在大多数自我报告的心理健康结果方面,从希望六号社区搬迁的青少年(n = 158)比对照组参与者(n = 429)情况更差。加入主观社区测量指标通常并未实质性改变这些结果。
我们的研究结果表明,从高贫困社区搬迁至贫困程度略低的社区,与青少年更好的心理健康和风险行为结果无关。与一直生活在贫困程度较低社区的对照组参与者相比,在高贫困社区长大的持续影响、新社区的微小改善、他们在新社区居住的相对较短时间,和/或搬迁的压力似乎使希望六号社区大多数青少年的心理健康结果恶化。