The associations of objective and perceived neighborhood disadvantage with stress among pregnant black women

Author:

Vaughan Sarah E.1ORCID,Misra Dawn P.1,Gohar Jazib1,Hyer Suzanne2,Price Mercedes1,Giurgescu Carmen2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan

2. College of Nursing University of Central Florida Orlando Florida

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNeighborhood disadvantage may impact risk of preterm birth through stress. Few studies have examined how neighborhood disadvantage relates to stress during pregnancy, especially for Black women.MethodsSecondary data analysis of 572 women in a prospective cohort in Detroit, MI and Columbus, OH. Participants completed questionnaires including the ROSS Neighborhood Disorder Scale, the crime subscale of the Perceived Neighborhood Scale (PNS), and the Perceived Stress Scale. An objective neighborhood disadvantage index (NDI) was created using principal components analysis after geocoding residential addresses and linking to Census data.ResultsAll models used logistic regression. Adjusted for maternal age and annual household income, perceived stress was positively associated with perceived neighborhood disorder (p < .01). In a separate model, perceived neighborhood crime was positively associated with perceived neighborhood disorder (p = .005). In a joint model adjusted for age and income, the association of disorder with stress was similar in magnitude (p < .01) but the association between crime and stress weakened. The NDI was not associated with perceived stress before or after adjustment for confounders.ConclusionsPerceived neighborhood disadvantage may capture a different dimension than objective neighborhood disadvantage. Future studies should test stress as a pathway by which neighborhood environment increases risk of preterm birth.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Nursing

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