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Journal Article

Citation

Hale L, Hill TD, Burdette AM. Prev. Med. 2010; 51(3-4): 275-278.

Affiliation

Preventive Medicine, Graduate Program in Public Health, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8338.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ypmed.2010.06.017

PMID

20600254

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We examine the association between perceived neighborhood disorder and self-rated physical health. Building on previous research, we test whether this association is mediated by sleep quality. METHODS: We use data from the 2004 Survey of Texas Adults (n=1,323) to estimate a series of ordinary least squares regression models. We formally assess mediation by testing for significant changes in the effect of neighborhood disorder before and after adjusting for sleep quality. RESULTS: We find that residence in a neighborhood that is perceived as noisy, unclean, and crime-ridden is associated with poorer self-rated physical health, even with controls for irregular exercise, poor diet quality, smoking, binge drinking, obesity and a host of relevant sociodemographic factors. Our results also indicate that the relationship between neighborhood disorder and self-rated physical health is partially mediated by lower sleep quality. CONCLUSION: Targeted interventions designed to promote sleep quality in disadvantaged neighborhoods may help to improve the physical health of residents in the short-term. Policies aimed at solving the problem of neighborhood disorder are needed to support sleep quality and physical health in the long-term.


Language: en

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