Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4193902 American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2009 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

ContextEpidemiologists and public health researchers are studying neighborhood's effect on individual health. The health of older adults may be more influenced by their neighborhoods as a result of decreased mobility. However, research on neighborhood's influence on older adults' health, specifically, is limited.Evidence acquisitionRecent studies on neighborhood and health for older adults were identified. Studies were identified through searches of databases including PsycINFO, CINAHL, PubMed, Academic Search Premier, Ageline, Social Science Citation Index, and Health Source. Criteria for inclusion were as follows: human studies; English language; study sample included adults aged ≥55 years; health outcomes, including mental health, health behaviors, morbidity, and mortality; neighborhood as the primary exposure variable of interest; empirical research; and studies that included ≥10 neighborhoods. Air pollution studies were excluded. Five hundred thirty-eight relevant articles were published during 1997–2007; a total of 33 of these articles met inclusion criteria.Evidence synthesisThe measures of objective and perceived aspects of neighborhood were summarized. Neighborhood was primarily operationalized using census-defined boundaries. Measures of neighborhood were principally derived from objective sources of data; eight studies assessed perceived neighborhood alone or in combination with objective measures. Six categories of neighborhood characteristics were socioeconomic composition, racial composition, demographics, perceived resources and/or problems, physical environment, and social environment. The studies are primarily cross-sectional and use administrative data to characterize neighborhood.ConclusionsThese studies suggest that neighborhood environment is important for older adults' health and functioning.

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