journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38428064/power-intersectionality-and-stigma-informing-a-gender-and-spatially-sensitive-public-health-approach-to-women-and-gambling-in-great-britain
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Fannin, Sharon Collard, Sara Davies
In Britain more men participate in gambling than women, although the gender gap is narrowing; and online gambling is increasing among women and men. Gambling practices differ between men and women but also between different groups of women, with evidence that younger women are diversifying to gamble in different ways from older women. Complex and powerful spatial, socio-cultural and economic forces shape women's experiences of gambling, the problems gambling may cause, and wider societal efforts to minimise these harms...
February 29, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38428065/are-spanish-adolescents-who-actively-commute-to-and-from-school-more-active-in-other-domains-a-spatiotemporal-investigation
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P Campos-Garzón, T Stewart, X Palma-Leal, J Molina-García, M Herrador-Colmenero, J Schipperijn, P Chillón, Y Barranco-Ruiz
We examined the association between mode of commuting to/from school (i.e., walking, multimodal, and motorized-vehicle) and movement behaviours in several space-time domains (i.e., total day, home, school, transport, and other locations). Walking to and/or from school was associated with higher MVPA in all space-time domains except home, where no associations were found. After subtracting commuting time to/from school from total day domain, the associations in favour of walking to/from school were maintained compared to those using other commuting modes, and in transport domain these associations dissipated...
February 28, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38408408/a-tale-of-many-neighborhoods-latent-profile-analysis-to-derive-a-national-neighborhood-typology-for-the-us
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hiwot Y Zewdie, Jamaica R Robinson, Marc A Adams, Anjum Hajat, Jana A Hirsch, Brian E Saelens, Stephen J Mooney
INTRODUCTION: Neighborhoods are complex and multi-faceted. Analytic strategies used to model neighborhoods should reflect this complexity, with the potential to better understand how neighborhood characteristics together impact health. We used latent profile analysis (LPA) to derive a residential neighborhood typology applicable for census tracts across the US. METHODS: From tract-level 2015-2019 American Community Survey (ACS) five-year estimates, we selected five indicators that represent four neighborhood domains: demographic composition, commuting, socioeconomic composition, and built environment...
February 25, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38402812/the-progressive-place-paradox-status-based-health-inequalities-are-magnified-in-more-economically-progressive-swiss-localities
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katy Morris, Dimitrios Lampropoulos
Low socioeconomic status (measured both objectively and subjectively) is systematically associated with worse health. Amid renewed interest in contextual influences on health inequalities, we ask whether variation in the prevailing ideological climate moderates the size of the health gap between low and high status individuals. Based on the minority stress hypothesis, we expect that living in an economically progressive place within Switzerland - places where more residents endorse the need for change to the economic status quo - will reduce the magnitude of the health gap...
February 24, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38401397/neighborhood-built-and-food-environment-in-relation-to-glycemic-control-in-people-with-type-2-diabetes-in-the-moving-to-health-study
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dori E Rosenberg, Maricela F Cruz, Stephen J Mooney, Jennifer F Bobb, Adam Drewnowski, Anne Vernez Moudon, Andrea J Cook, Philip M Hurvitz, Paula Lozano, Jane Anau, Mary Kay Theis, David E Arterburn
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether built environment and food metrics are associated with glycemic control in people with type 2 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We included 14,985 patients with type 2 diabetes using electronic health records from Kaiser Permanente Washington. Patient addresses were geocoded with ArcGIS using King County and Esri reference data. Built environment exposures estimated from geocoded locations included residential unit density, transit threshold residential unit density, park access, and having supermarkets and fast food restaurants within 1600-m Euclidean buffers...
February 23, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38367323/drinking-alcohol-at-home-feels-different-from-drinking-in-public-places-a-qualitative-study-of-midlife-australians
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah MacLean, Gabriel Caluzzi, Megan Cook, Robin Room, Sarah Callinan
This paper shows how drinking in one's own home affords different affective experiences to drinking in public settings such as bars, pubs and restaurants. A thematic analysis of interviews with 40 Australians aged 30-65 identified three main variations in alcohol-associated feelings, sensations and urges. Alcohol was used at home to decelerate, but in contrast, people were enlivened when drinking in public venues. Drinking in public generated a sense of vigilance and greater requirement to self-monitor than usually felt necessary at home...
February 16, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38367322/higher-air-pollution-exposure-in-early-life-is-associated-with-worse-health-among-older-adults-a-72-year-follow-up-study-from-scotland
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gergő Baranyi, Lee Williamson, Zhiqiang Feng, Edward Carnell, Massimo Vieno, Chris Dibben
Air pollution increases the risk of mortality and morbidity. However, limited evidence exists on the very long-term associations between early life air pollution exposure and health, as well as on potential pathways. This study explored the relationship between fine particle (PM2.5 ) exposure at age 3 and limiting long-term illness (LLTI) at ages 55, 65 and 75 using data from the Scottish Longitudinal Study Birth Cohort 1936, a representative administrative cohort study. We found that early life PM2.5 exposure was associated with higher odds of LLTI in mid-to-late adulthood (OR = 1...
February 16, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38364457/the-transmission-network-and-spatial-temporal-distributions-of-covid-19-a-case-study-in-lanzhou-china
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liangjie Yang, Xiao Yu, Yongchun Yang, Ya Ling Luo, Lingling Zhang
Public emergencies exert substantial adverse effects on the socioeconomic development of cities. Investigating the transmission characteristics of COVID-19 can lead to evidence-based strategies for future pandemic intervention and prevention. Drawing upon primary COVID-19 data collected at both the street level and from individuals with confirmed cases in Lanzhou, China, our study examined the spatial-temporal distribution of the pandemic at a detailed level. First, we constructed transmission networks based on social relationships and spatial behavior to elucidate the actual natural transmission chain of COVID-19...
February 15, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38354468/indigenous-lands-and-health-access-the-influence-of-a-sense-of-place-on-disparities-in-post-stroke-recovery-in-taiwan
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zih-Yong Liao, Susanne Kean, Elaine Haycock-Stuart
Despite many countries having policies and systems for universal healthcare coverage, health disparity persists, with significant variations in disease prevalence and life expectancy between different groups of people. This focused ethnography explored the post-stroke recovery of Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations in three geographical areas in Taiwan. Forty-eight observations and 24 interviews were carried out with 12 dyads of stroke survivors and family caregivers, revealing their varied experiences of healthcare...
February 13, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38340497/spatial-scale-effects-on-associations-between-built-environment-and-cognitive-function-multi-ethnic-study-of-atherosclerosis
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jingjing Li, Jana A Hirsch, Yvonne L Michael, Lilah M Besser, Amy H Auchincloss, Timothy M Hughes, Brisa N Sánchez
Built environments have the potential to favorably support cognitive function. Despite growing work on this topic, most of the work has ignored variation in the spatial scale of the effect. The issue with spatial scale effects is that the size and shape of the areal unit within which built environment characteristics are measured naturally influence the built environment exposure metric and thus the estimated associations with health. We used spatial distributed lag modeling (DLM) to estimate how associations between built environment exposures (walkable destinations [WD], social destinations [SD]) and change in cognition varied across distance of these destinations from participants' residences...
February 9, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38340496/a-systematic-review-of-audit-tools-for-evaluating-the-quality-of-green-spaces-in-mental-health-research
#31
REVIEW
Hyunseo Park, Catherine D Brown, Amber L Pearson
Research showing the relationship between exposure to green space and health has yielded conflicting results, possibly due to the oversight of green space quality in quantitative studies. This systematic review, guided by the PRISMA framework (registered under Prospero ID CRD42023279720), focused on audit tools for green space quality in mental health research. From 4028 studies, 13 were reviewed, with 77 % linking better mental health outcomes to higher green space quality. Eight tools, especially Public Open Space and Dillen et al...
February 9, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38340495/eviction-from-rental-housing-and-its-links-to-health-a-scoping-review
#32
REVIEW
Patrick D Smith, Danya E Keene, Sarah Dilday, Kim M Blankenship, Allison K Groves
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 9, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38301383/neighbourhood-characteristics-and-socioeconomic-inequalities-in-child-mental-health-cross-sectional-and-longitudinal-findings-from-the-growing-up-in-ireland-study
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
I Gusti Ngurah Edi Putra, Amy M McInerney, Eric Robinson, Sonya S Deschênes
This study examined the role of neighbourhood characteristics in explaining socioeconomic inequalities in child mental health (the total difficulties score from the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire) using data from Cohort '08 of Growing Up in Ireland Waves 3 (age 5; baseline) and 5 (age 9; follow-up). Twenty neighbourhood items were grouped into neighbourhood safety, built environments, cohesion, interaction, and disorder. Data were analysed using regression, single and multiple mediation, and network psychometric analyses...
January 31, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38301382/the-privilege-of-working-from-home-and-health-disparities-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-in-major-american-cities
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Youqin Huang, Yuanfei Li, Rui Li, Kai Zhang
Working from home (WFH) has been adopted as a key mitigation strategy in the COVID-19 pandemic; yet few research has studied its impact on pandemic outcomes. Using multiple sources of data including cellphone data and online survey during the pandemic, this study investigates the effect of WFH on intra-city health disparities during the COVID-19 pandemic in American cities. Pandemic data for zip code tabulation areas and cellphone mobility data for census block groups in New York City (NYC), Chicago, and Philadelphia are converted to census tract level, which are then merged with 2019 census data...
January 31, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38295757/musculoskeletal-health-and-life-space-mobility-in-older-adults-findings-from-the-hertfordshire-cohort-study
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gregorio Bevilacqua, Stefania D'Angelo, Leo D Westbury, Nicholas C Harvey, Elaine M Dennison
This study explores the relationship between musculoskeletal conditions of ageing and life-space mobility (LSM) in 1110 community-dwelling older adults from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study. LSM is a novel measure which captures ability to mobilise within the home, locally and more widely. Among men, older age, care receipt, not driving a car, lower wellbeing, and reduced physical function were associated with lower LSM, while in women only driving status and physical function were associated with LSM. Osteoporosis, arthritis, and fractures had no significant associations with LSM in either gender...
January 30, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38387361/the-built-environment-and-cancer-survivorship-a-scoping-review
#36
REVIEW
Naiyu Chen, Carol Mita, Ilkania M Chowdhury-Paulino, Alaina H Shreves, Cindy R Hu, Li Yi, Peter James
BACKGROUND: There are more than 32 million cancer survivors worldwide. The built environment is one of the contextual factors that may influence cancer survivorship. However, studies investigating the interdisciplinary field of the built environment and cancer survivorship are lacking. OBJECTIVE: To conduct a systematic review of the existing literature regarding the relationship between the built environment and cancer survivorship, identify any knowledge gaps, and recommend future research directions...
March 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38266374/nature-visits-but-not-residential-greenness-are-associated-with-reduced-income-related-inequalities-in-subjective-well-being
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leonie Fian, Mathew P White, Arne Arnberger, Thomas Thaler, Anja Heske, Sabine Pahl
Nature exposure can promote human health and well-being. Additionally, there is some, albeit mixed, evidence that this relationship is stronger for socio-economically disadvantaged groups (equigenesis). Using a cross-sectional survey of the Austrian population (N = 2300), we explored the relationships between both residential greenness and recreational nature visits, and affective (WHO-5 Well-Being Index) and evaluative (Personal Well-Being Index-7) subjective well-being. Partially supporting the equigenesis hypothesis, regression analyses controlling for potential confounders found that recreational visit frequency, but not residential greenness, moderated the effect of income-related disparities in both subjective well-being metrics...
January 23, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38262260/association-between-preschooler-outdoor-play-and-home-yard-vegetation-as-measured-by-high-resolution-imagery-findings-from-the-playce-study
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Trina Robinson, Gursimran Dhamrait, Kevin Murray, Bryan Boruff, John Duncan, Jasper Schipperijn, Hayley Christian
Outdoor play in the home yard is an important source of physical activity for many preschoolers. This study investigated if home yard size and vegetation are related to preschooler outdoor play time. High-resolution remotely sensed data were used to distinguish between types of vegetation coverage in the home yard. Shrub and tree cover, and yard size, were positively associated with outdoor play. Following stratification by socio-economic status (SES - parent education), only tree cover was positively associated with preschooler outdoor play in low SES households...
January 22, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38244248/spatio-temporal-effects-of-built-environment-on-running-activity-based-on-a-random-forest-approach-in-nanjing-china
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wanyun Zhou, Zhengyuan Liang, Zhengxi Fan, Zhiming Li
Running activity is closely related to the urban built environment in terms of mental and physical health, and this relationship can change as a result of spatio-temporal changes. Most studies, however, do not account for this and assume a linear relationship exists between the built environment and running activity. This study, therefore, collected running data spanning 2019-2022, studied spatial distribution of four-year running activity, established built environment indicators, used a random forest approach to investigate the non-linear relationship between them, and evaluated spatio-temporal changes in the relationships over time...
January 19, 2024: Health & Place
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38241851/structural-barriers-to-health-care-as-risk-factors-for-preterm-and-small-for-gestational-age-birth-among-us-born-black-and-white-mothers
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David S Curtis, Norman Waitzman, Michael R Kramer, Julie H Shakib
We develop county-level measures of structural and institutional barriers to care, and test associations between these barriers and birth outcomes for US-born Black and White mothers using national birth records for 2014-2017. Results indicate elevated odds of greater preterm birth severity for Black mothers in counties with higher uninsurance rates among Black adults, fewer Black physicians per Black residents, and fewer publicly-funded contraceptive services. Most structural barriers were not associated with small-for-gestational-age birth, and barriers defined for Black residents were not associated with birth outcomes for White mothers, with the exception of Black uninsurance rate...
January 18, 2024: Health & Place
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