Long-term neighborhood poverty trajectories and obesity in a sample of california mothers

Health & Place
Connor M SheehanCatherine Cubbin

Abstract

Neighborhoods (and people) are not static, and are instead shaped by dynamic long-term processes of change (and mobility). Using the Geographic Research on Wellbeing survey, a population-based sample of 2339 Californian mothers, we characterize then investigate how long-term latent neighborhood poverty trajectories predict the likelihood of obesity, taking into account short-term individual residential mobility. We find that, net of individual and neighborhood-level controls, living in or moving to tracts that experienced long-term low poverty was associated with lower odds of being obese relative to living in tracts characterized by long-term high poverty.

Citations

May 10, 2018·Biodemography and Social Biology·Connor SheehanIsaac Sasson
Jul 15, 2020·Journal of Urban Health : Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine·Tse-Chuan Yang, Scott J South
Sep 19, 2019·Journal of Health and Social Behavior·Naomi PriestTania King
Sep 5, 2019·Current Cardiovascular Risk Reports·Kosuke TamuraTiffany M Powell-Wiley
Mar 21, 2018·Sleep Health·Connor SheehanCatherine Cubbin
Mar 27, 2021·Neurology·Yeonwoo KimNatalie Colabianchi

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