Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5046635 Social Science & Medicine 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Higher community SES leads to better health for children in urban China.•Community SES positively affects children's height for age in urban and rural China.•Community health effects are strongest in most disadvantaged communities.•Community health effects are conditioned by gender and family background.

The link between community environment and individual health outcomes has been widely documented in Western literature, but little is known about whether community context influences children's health over and above individual characteristics in developing countries. This study examines how community socioeconomic status (SES) influences children's self-rated health and nutritional status in urban and rural China and explores whether the effects of community SES vary by a child's gender and family background. Using data from the China Family Penal Studies in 2010, this study focuses on children aged 10-15 years old living in 261 urban neighborhoods and 293 rural villages in China. Multilevel regression models are estimated to examine the effect of community SES on the probability of reporting poor/fair health and nutritional status measured by height for age while controlling for individual and family characteristics. The results suggest that community SES has a positive and curvilinear effect on children's health and nutritional status in urban China, and it only positively influences children's nutrition in rural China. Community SES has a stronger effect for boys than for girls, and for children in poorer families and families with lower levels of parental involvement.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
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