Cargando…

The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods

The purpose of this study was to examine the associations between individual and neighborhood social contextual factors and smoking prevalence among African-American women in subsidized neighborhoods. We randomly sampled 663 adult women in 17 subsidized neighborhoods in two Southeastern US states. T...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Andrews, Jeannette O., Mueller, Martina, Newman, Susan D., Magwood, Gayenell, Ahluwalia, Jasjit S., White, Kellee, Tingen, Martha S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4242849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25316192
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-014-9911-6
_version_ 1782346020642881536
author Andrews, Jeannette O.
Mueller, Martina
Newman, Susan D.
Magwood, Gayenell
Ahluwalia, Jasjit S.
White, Kellee
Tingen, Martha S.
author_facet Andrews, Jeannette O.
Mueller, Martina
Newman, Susan D.
Magwood, Gayenell
Ahluwalia, Jasjit S.
White, Kellee
Tingen, Martha S.
author_sort Andrews, Jeannette O.
collection PubMed
description The purpose of this study was to examine the associations between individual and neighborhood social contextual factors and smoking prevalence among African-American women in subsidized neighborhoods. We randomly sampled 663 adult women in 17 subsidized neighborhoods in two Southeastern US states. The smoking prevalence among participants was 37.6 %, with an estimated neighborhood household prevalence ranging from 30 to 68 %. Smokers were more likely to be older, have lower incomes, have lower BMI, and live with other smokers. Women with high social cohesion were less likely to smoke, although living in neighborhoods with higher social cohesion was not associated with smoking prevalence. Women with higher social cohesion were more likely to be older and had lived in the neighborhood longer. Women with high stress (related to violence and disorder) and who lived in neighborhoods with higher stress were more likely to smoke. Younger women were more likely to have higher stress than older women. There were no statistically significant associations with objective neighborhood crime data in any model. This is the first study to examine both individual and neighborhood social contextual correlates among African-American women in subsidized neighborhoods. This study extends findings about smoking behaviors and neighborhood social contexts in this high-risk, urban population. Future research is needed to explore age and residential stability differences and perceptions of social cohesion, neighborhood disorder, and perceived violence in subsidized housing. Further research is also warranted on African-American women, subsidized housing, smoking, social context, health disparities’ effective strategies to address these individual and contextual factors to better inform future ecological-based multilevel prevention, and cessation intervention strategies.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4242849
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Springer US
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-42428492014-11-26 The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods Andrews, Jeannette O. Mueller, Martina Newman, Susan D. Magwood, Gayenell Ahluwalia, Jasjit S. White, Kellee Tingen, Martha S. J Urban Health Article The purpose of this study was to examine the associations between individual and neighborhood social contextual factors and smoking prevalence among African-American women in subsidized neighborhoods. We randomly sampled 663 adult women in 17 subsidized neighborhoods in two Southeastern US states. The smoking prevalence among participants was 37.6 %, with an estimated neighborhood household prevalence ranging from 30 to 68 %. Smokers were more likely to be older, have lower incomes, have lower BMI, and live with other smokers. Women with high social cohesion were less likely to smoke, although living in neighborhoods with higher social cohesion was not associated with smoking prevalence. Women with higher social cohesion were more likely to be older and had lived in the neighborhood longer. Women with high stress (related to violence and disorder) and who lived in neighborhoods with higher stress were more likely to smoke. Younger women were more likely to have higher stress than older women. There were no statistically significant associations with objective neighborhood crime data in any model. This is the first study to examine both individual and neighborhood social contextual correlates among African-American women in subsidized neighborhoods. This study extends findings about smoking behaviors and neighborhood social contexts in this high-risk, urban population. Future research is needed to explore age and residential stability differences and perceptions of social cohesion, neighborhood disorder, and perceived violence in subsidized housing. Further research is also warranted on African-American women, subsidized housing, smoking, social context, health disparities’ effective strategies to address these individual and contextual factors to better inform future ecological-based multilevel prevention, and cessation intervention strategies. Springer US 2014-10-15 2014-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4242849/ /pubmed/25316192 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-014-9911-6 Text en © The Author(s) 2014 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Andrews, Jeannette O.
Mueller, Martina
Newman, Susan D.
Magwood, Gayenell
Ahluwalia, Jasjit S.
White, Kellee
Tingen, Martha S.
The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods
title The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods
title_full The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods
title_fullStr The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods
title_full_unstemmed The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods
title_short The Association of Individual and Neighborhood Social Cohesion, Stressors, and Crime on Smoking Status Among African-American Women in Southeastern US Subsidized Housing Neighborhoods
title_sort association of individual and neighborhood social cohesion, stressors, and crime on smoking status among african-american women in southeastern us subsidized housing neighborhoods
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4242849/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25316192
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-014-9911-6
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewsjeannetteo theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT muellermartina theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT newmansusand theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT magwoodgayenell theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT ahluwaliajasjits theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT whitekellee theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT tingenmarthas theassociationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT andrewsjeannetteo associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT muellermartina associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT newmansusand associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT magwoodgayenell associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT ahluwaliajasjits associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT whitekellee associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods
AT tingenmarthas associationofindividualandneighborhoodsocialcohesionstressorsandcrimeonsmokingstatusamongafricanamericanwomeninsoutheasternussubsidizedhousingneighborhoods