Gill Thomas M, Becher Robert D, Leo-Summers Linda, Gahbauer Evelyne A
Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Surgery, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2025 Jan;73(1):199-205. doi: 10.1111/jgs.19172. Epub 2024 Aug 29.
Among older persons, neighborhood disadvantage is a granular and increasingly used social determinant of health and functional well-being. The frequency of transitions into or out of a disadvantaged neighborhood over time is not known. These transitions may occur when a person moves from one location to another or when the Neighborhood Atlas, the data source for the area deprivation index (ADI) that is used to identify disadvantaged neighborhoods at the census-block level, is updated.
From a prospective longitudinal study of community-living persons, aged 70 years or older in South Central Connecticut, neighborhood disadvantage was ascertained every 18 months for 22 years (from March 1998 to March 2020). ADI scores higher than the 80th state percentile were used to distinguish neighborhoods that were disadvantaged (81-100) from those that were not (1-80).
At baseline, 205 (29.3%) of the 699 participants were living in a disadvantaged neighborhood. Changes in neighborhood disadvantage during 14 consecutive 18-month intervals were relatively uncommon, ranging from 1.5% to 11.8%. Nearly 80% of participants had no change in neighborhood disadvantage and less than 4% had more than one change over a median follow-up of more than 9 years. Overall, the rate of transitions into or out of neighborhood disadvantage was only 2.7 per 100 person-years. These transitions were most common when the Neighborhood Atlas was updated (2013, 2015, 2018, and 2020). Comparable results were observed when decile changes in ADI scores during the 18-month intervals were evaluated.
In longitudinal studies of older persons with extended follow-up, it may not be necessary to update information on disadvantaged neighborhoods in circumstances when it is possible, and the degree of misclassification of neighborhood disadvantage should be relatively low in circumstances when updated information cannot be obtained.
在老年人中,邻里劣势是一个细致入微且越来越多地被用于衡量健康和功能福祉的社会决定因素。随着时间的推移,进出劣势邻里的频率尚不清楚。当一个人从一个地方搬到另一个地方,或者用于在人口普查街区层面识别劣势邻里的地区剥夺指数(ADI)的数据源邻里地图集更新时,可能会发生这些转变。
在对康涅狄格州中南部70岁及以上社区居住者进行的一项前瞻性纵向研究中,在22年(从1998年3月至2020年3月)的时间里,每18个月确定一次邻里劣势情况。ADI得分高于该州第80百分位数被用于区分劣势邻里(81 - 100)和非劣势邻里(1 - 80)。
在基线时,699名参与者中有205名(29.3%)居住在劣势邻里。在连续14个18个月的间隔期内,邻里劣势的变化相对不常见,范围从1.5%到11.8%。在超过9年的中位随访期内,近80%的参与者邻里劣势没有变化,不到4%的参与者有不止一次变化。总体而言,进出邻里劣势的转变率仅为每100人年2.7次。这些转变在邻里地图集更新时(2013年、2015年、2018年和2020年)最为常见。在评估18个月间隔期内ADI得分的十分位数变化时也观察到了类似结果。
在对老年人进行长期随访的纵向研究中,在可能的情况下,可能没有必要更新劣势邻里的信息,并且在无法获得更新信息的情况下,邻里劣势的错误分类程度应该相对较低。