Correlation Among Neighborhood-level Measures of the Tobacco Retail Environment

Author:

Delamater Paul L1ORCID,Herbert Lily2,Golden Shelley D34,Kong Amanda Y5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography and Environment and Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, CB #3220, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC

2. TSET Health Promotion Research Center , Stephenson Cancer Center, The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

3. Department of Health Behavior and Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

4. Gillings School of Global Public Health , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

5. Department of Family and Preventive Medicine and TSET Health Promotion Research Center , Stephenson Cancer Center, The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Tobacco retailer density and distance to tobacco retailers are understood to influence tobacco-related behaviors; however, there is no general agreement on how to best characterize or measure the tobacco retail environment (TRE). In this data-driven analysis, we examine similarities among neighborhood-level measures of the TRE and assess how geographic resolution of the neighborhood units may affect them. Methods We used locations of likely tobacco retailers in the United States (US) to calculate multiple retailer count, density, and distance measures. Measures were calculated at the Census block group, tract, and county (including county equivalents) levels of geographic aggregation. Spearman’s correlation was used to evaluate similarity among the TRE measures. Results At the block group and tract level, correlation among all TRE measures ranged from slightly negative (ρ = -0.03) to nearly perfect (ρ = 0.99). At both levels of aggregation, distance-based TRE measures were highly correlated (ρ > 0.76). At the block group level, simple count of retailers was highly correlated with the density measures (ρ > 0.83), and at the tract level, simple count was moderately to highly correlated with the density measures (ρ > 0.5). Findings were generally similar at the county level; a notable deviation was that retailers per person was negatively correlated with all other TRE measures (range from ρ = -0.08 to ρ = -0.32). Conclusions Some common measures were not correlated, suggesting they capture different aspects of the TRE; similarity among the various measures also varied by level of geographic aggregation. IMPLICATIONS Because the tobacco retail environment shapes people’s tobacco-related behaviors, using appropriate measures to characterize it at a neighborhood-level is paramount. Our work highlights both the similarities and differences among a set of common measures, thereby suggesting the measures may be capturing different aspects of the overall retail environment. Our findings regarding geographic level of aggregation underscore the importance of neighborhood definition in any tobacco retail environment analysis.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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