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Published in: Journal of Urban Health 5/2013

01-10-2013

The Urban Built Environment and Associations with Women’s Psychosocial Health

Authors: Lynne C. Messer, Pamela Maxson, Marie Lynn Miranda

Published in: Journal of Urban Health | Issue 5/2013

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Abstract

The determinants that underlie a healthy or unhealthy pregnancy are complex and not well understood. We assess the relationship between the built environment and maternal psychosocial status using directly observed residential neighborhood characteristics (housing damage, property disorder, tenure status, vacancy, security measures, violent crime, and nuisances) and a wide range of psychosocial attributes (interpersonal support evaluation list, self-efficacy, John Henryism active coping, negative partner support, Perceived Stress Scale, perceived racism, Center for Epidemiologic Studies—Depression) on a pregnant cohort of women living in the urban core of Durham, NC, USA. We found some associations between built environment characteristic and psychosocial health varied by exposure categorization approach, while others (residence in environments with more rental property is associated with higher reported active coping and negative partner support) were consistent across exposure categorizations. This study outlines specific neighborhood characteristics that are modifiable risk markers and therefore important targets for increased research and public health intervention.
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Metadata
Title
The Urban Built Environment and Associations with Women’s Psychosocial Health
Authors
Lynne C. Messer
Pamela Maxson
Marie Lynn Miranda
Publication date
01-10-2013
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Urban Health / Issue 5/2013
Print ISSN: 1099-3460
Electronic ISSN: 1468-2869
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-012-9743-1

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