Department of Criminology, Law and Society, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia.
Department of Criminal Justice and Sociology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming.
Am J Prev Med. 2020 Jun;58(6):799-806. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2019.12.012. Epub 2020 Feb 12.
The geographic overlap of violence and poor health is a major public health concern. To understand whether and how place-based interventions targeting micro-geographic places can reduce this undesirable co-occurrence, the study addresses 2 important questions. First, to what extent are deteriorated health conditions associated with living at violent crime hot spots? Second, through what mechanisms can focused place-based interventions break the association between living with violence and deteriorated health?
This study used survey data from 2,724 respondents living on 328 street segments that were categorized as violent crime hot spots (181 segments with 1,532 respondents) versus non-hot spots (147 segments with 1,192 respondents) in 2013-2014 in Baltimore, Maryland. Propensity score analysis assessed whether individuals living at violent crime hot spots had lower general health perceptions than people living at non-hot spots. Marginal structural models estimated the proportion of total effects mediated by 3 theoretically informed intervening mechanisms. Analyses were conducted in 2019.
Respondents living at violent crime hot spots had a lower level of self-rated general health (b= -0.096, 95% CI= -0.176, -0.015) and higher levels of health limitations (b=0.068, 95% CI=0.027, 0.109) and problems (OR=2.026, 95% CI=1.225, 3.349) than those living at non-hot spots. Enhanced perceptions of safety, collective efficacy, and police legitimacy may break the association between living in places with extremely high levels of violence and deteriorated health.
Indicated or selective strategies are urgently needed to target micro-geographic locations with known increased risks, supplementing universal strategies applied to a broader community.
暴力和健康状况不佳的地域重叠是一个主要的公共卫生关注点。为了了解以微观地理位置为目标的地方干预措施是否以及如何能够减少这种不良的同时发生,本研究提出了两个重要问题。首先,健康状况恶化与生活在暴力犯罪热点地区之间有多大程度的关联?其次,有针对性的地方干预措施可以通过哪些机制打破生活在暴力环境与健康状况恶化之间的关联?
本研究使用了 2013-2014 年马里兰州巴尔的摩市 328 个街道段的调查数据,这些街道段被分为暴力犯罪热点(181 个街道段,有 1532 名受访者)和非热点(147 个街道段,有 1192 名受访者)。倾向评分分析评估了生活在暴力犯罪热点地区的个体与生活在非热点地区的个体相比,其一般健康感知是否较低。边际结构模型估计了 3 个理论上有依据的干预机制所介导的总效应的比例。分析于 2019 年进行。
生活在暴力犯罪热点地区的受访者自我报告的一般健康水平较低(b=-0.096,95%CI=-0.176,-0.015),健康受限程度较高(b=0.068,95%CI=0.027,0.109)和问题(OR=2.026,95%CI=1.225,3.349)比生活在非热点地区的受访者更高。增强对安全、集体效能和警察合法性的感知,可能会打破生活在暴力程度极高的地方与健康状况恶化之间的关联。
迫切需要针对已知风险较高的微观地理位置采取有针对性或选择性的策略,补充适用于更广泛社区的普遍策略。