Eick Stephanie M, Cushing Lara, Goin Dana E, Padula Amy M, Andrade Aileen, DeMicco Erin, Woodruff Tracey J, Morello-Frosch Rachel
Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, California.
Environ Epidemiol. 2022 Aug 15;6(5):e224. doi: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000224. eCollection 2022 Oct.
Living in a disadvantaged neighborhood has been associated with adverse birth outcomes. Most prior studies have conceptualized neighborhoods using census boundaries and few have examined the role of neighborhood perceptions, which may better capture the neighborhood environment. In the present study, we examined associations between extrinsic and perceived neighborhood quality measures and adverse birth outcomes.
Participants resided in the San Francisco Bay Area of California and were enrolled in Chemicals in Our Bodies, a prospective birth cohort (N = 817). The Index of Concentration at the Extremes (ICE) for income, Area Deprivation Index (ADI), and the Urban Displacement Project's measure of gentrification were included as census block group-level extrinsic neighborhood quality measures. Poor perceived neighborhood quality was assessed using an interview questionnaire. Linear regression models were utilized to examine associations between extrinsic and perceived neighborhood quality measures, and gestational age and birthweight for gestational age z-scores. Covariates in adjusted models were chosen via a directed acyclic graph (DAG) and included maternal age, education, and marital status.
In adjusted models, having poor perceived neighborhood quality was associated with higher birthweight z-scores, relative to those who did not perceive their neighborhood as poor quality (β = 0.21, 95% confidence intervals = 0.01, 0.42). Relative to the least disadvantaged tertile, the upper tertile of the ADI was associated with a modest reduction in gestational age (β = -0.35, 95% confidence intervals = -0.67, -0.02).
In the Chemicals in Our Bodies study population, extrinsic and perceived neighborhood quality measures were inconsistently associated with adverse birth outcomes.
生活在弱势社区与不良出生结局相关。大多数先前的研究使用人口普查边界来界定社区,很少有研究考察社区认知的作用,而社区认知可能能更好地反映社区环境。在本研究中,我们考察了外在和感知到的社区质量指标与不良出生结局之间的关联。
参与者居住在加利福尼亚州旧金山湾区,被纳入“我们身体中的化学物质”这一前瞻性出生队列研究(N = 817)。收入极端集中度指数(ICE)、地区贫困指数(ADI)以及城市变迁项目的绅士化程度测量指标被纳入作为普查街区组层面的外在社区质量指标。使用访谈问卷评估感知到的社区质量差的情况。利用线性回归模型考察外在和感知到的社区质量指标与胎龄以及胎龄别出生体重z分数之间的关联。调整模型中的协变量通过有向无环图(DAG)选择,包括母亲年龄、教育程度和婚姻状况。
在调整模型中,与那些不认为自己社区质量差的人相比,认为社区质量差与更高的出生体重z分数相关(β = 0.21,95%置信区间 = 0.01,0.42)。相对于最不弱势的三分位数,ADI的最高三分位数与胎龄适度降低相关(β = -0.35,95%置信区间 = -0.67,-0.02)。
在“我们身体中的化学物质”研究人群中,外在和感知到的社区质量指标与不良出生结局的关联不一致。