Exploring how socioeconomic status affects neighbourhood environments? : effects on obesity risks : a longitudinal study in Singapore

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Bin Tan , S , Dickens , B L , Sevtsuk , A , Zheng , S , Zeng , K , Lee , Y S , Yap , F , Chan , S-Y , Chan , J K Y , Tan , K H , Chong , Y-S , Eriksson , J G , Chong , M F -F & Arcaya , M C 2022 , ' Exploring how socioeconomic status affects neighbourhood environments? effects on obesity risks : a longitudinal study in Singapore ' , Landscape and Urban Planning , vol. 226 , 104450 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2022.104450

Title: Exploring how socioeconomic status affects neighbourhood environments? : effects on obesity risks : a longitudinal study in Singapore
Author: Bin Tan, Shin; Dickens, Borame L.; Sevtsuk, Andres; Zheng, Siqi; Zeng, Kangwei; Lee, Yung Seng; Yap, Fabian; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chan, Jerry Kok Yen; Tan, Kok Hian; Chong, Yap-Seng; Eriksson, Johan G.; Chong, Mary F. -F.; Arcaya, Mariana C.
Contributor organization: Clinicum
Doctoral Programme in Population Health
Doctoral Programme in Oral Sciences
Doctoral Programme in Clinical Research
Research Programs Unit
Johan Eriksson / Principal Investigator
Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care
University of Helsinki
Date: 2022-10
Language: eng
Number of pages: 12
Belongs to series: Landscape and Urban Planning
ISSN: 0169-2046
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2022.104450
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/346728
Abstract: Research on how socioeconomic status interacts with neighbourhood characteristics to influence disparities in obesity outcomes is currently limited by residential segregation-induced structural confounding, a lack of empirical studies outside the U.S. and other 'Western' contexts, and an over-reliance on cross-sectional analyses. This study addresses these challenges by examining how socioeconomic status modifies the effect of accumulated exposures to obesogenic neighbourhood environments on children and mothers' BMI, drawing from a longitudinal mother-child birth cohort study in Singapore, an Asian city-state with relatively little residential segregation. We find that increased access to park connectors was associated with a decrease in BMI outcomes for mothers with higher socioeconomic status, but an increase for those with lower socioeconomic status. We also find that increased access to bus stops was associated with an increase in BMIz of children with lower socioeconomic status, but with a decrease in BMIz of children with higher socioeconomic status, while increased access to rail stations was associated with a decrease in BMIz of children with lower socioeconomic status only. Our results suggest that urban interventions might have heterogeneous effects by socioeconomic status.
Subject: Obesity
Built environment
Socioeconomic disparities
Structural confounding
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY
BUILT-ENVIRONMENT
RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION
CHILDHOOD OBESITY
FOOD ENVIRONMENT
CAUSAL INFERENCE
SPATIAL EQUITY
UNITED-STATES
ACTIVE TRAVEL
ENERGY-COST
5200 Other social sciences
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by_nc_nd
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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