Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA.
Community Alliance for Research and Engagement, New Haven, CT, USA.
J Urban Health. 2018 Apr;95(2):245-254. doi: 10.1007/s11524-018-0229-7.
Perceptions of neighborhood safety shape the well-being of individuals and communities, affecting neighborhood walkability, associated physical activity behaviors, and health conditions. However, less is known about the factors that determine perceptions of safety. One factor that may affect perceptions of neighborhood safety is the length of time someone has lived in their neighborhood. We use a representative, adult sample of urban low-income residents from the 2015 New Haven Health Survey (n = 1189) to investigate the associations between length of residence (new residents of < 1 year in neighborhood versus longer-term residents of 1 or more years in neighborhood) and perceptions of neighborhood safety (whether feeling unsafe to walk at night). We then examine the potential moderating effect of exposure to neighborhood violence on these associations. We find that the association between length of residence and perceived safety differs by exposure to neighborhood violence. Among those unexposed to neighborhood violence, longer-term neighborhood residents were more likely to feel unsafe compared to new residents (OR = 2.03, 95% CI 1.19, 3.45). Additionally, the effect of exposure to violence on feelings of safety was larger for new residents (OR = 9.10, 95% CI 2.72, 30.44) compared to longer-term residents (OR = 1.88, 95% CI 1.28, 2.77). Our findings suggest that length of residence may have implications for feelings of safety, and that experiences of violence may uniquely contribute to feelings of unsafety among new residents. These findings hold implications for interventions and policy efforts aimed at neighborhood safety improvements through community development, housing, or city urban planning initiatives, particularly for new neighborhood residents or those who experience neighborhood violence.
社区安全感知塑造了个体和社区的幸福感,影响着社区的可步行性、与之相关的身体活动行为和健康状况。然而,对于决定安全感知的因素了解较少。一个可能影响社区安全感知的因素是一个人在其社区居住的时间长短。我们使用 2015 年纽黑文健康调查(n=1189)中具有代表性的城市低收入成年居民样本,调查居住时间(在社区居住不到 1 年的新居民与在社区居住 1 年或以上的长期居民)与社区安全感知(夜间是否感到不安全步行)之间的关联。然后,我们检验了接触邻里暴力对这些关联的潜在调节作用。我们发现,居住时间长短与感知安全之间的关联因接触邻里暴力而异。在未接触邻里暴力的人群中,长期居住的社区居民比新居民更有可能感到不安全(OR=2.03,95%CI 1.19,3.45)。此外,接触暴力对安全感的影响对于新居民来说比长期居民更大(OR=9.10,95%CI 2.72,30.44)相比之下,长期居民(OR=1.88,95%CI 1.28,2.77)。我们的研究结果表明,居住时间可能对安全感有影响,而且暴力经历可能会对新居民的不安全感产生独特的影响。这些发现对旨在通过社区发展、住房或城市城市规划举措改善社区安全的干预措施和政策努力具有启示意义,特别是对于新社区居民或那些经历过邻里暴力的居民。