Accounting for context in studies of health inequalities: a review and comparison of analytic approaches

被引:26
|
作者
Schempf, Ashley H. [1 ]
Kaufman, Jay S. [2 ]
机构
[1] US Hlth Resources & Serv Adm, Off Epidemiol Policy & Evaluat, Maternal & Child Hlth Bur, Rockville, MD 20857 USA
[2] McGill Univ, Dept Epidemiol Biostat & Occupat Hlth, Montreal, PQ, Canada
关键词
Health status disparities; Minority health; Residence characteristics; Multilevel analysis; Econometric models; Statistical models; Gestational age; Preterm birth; RACIAL RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION; BLACK/WHITE HEALTH; MULTILEVEL MODELS; INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL; DISPARITIES; CLUSTER; ROBINSON; EXPLAIN; BIRTH; GAP;
D O I
10.1016/j.annepidem.2012.06.105
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: A common epidemiologic objective is to evaluate the contribution of residential context to individual-level disparities by race or socioeconomic position. Purpose: We reviewed analytic strategies to account for the total (observed and unobserved factors) contribution of environmental context to health inequalities, including conventional fixed effects (FE) and hybrid FE implemented within a random effects (RE) or a marginal model. Methods: To illustrate results and limitations of the various analytic approaches of accounting for the total contextual component of health disparities, we used data on births nested within neighborhoods as an applied example of evaluating neighborhood confounding of racial disparities in gestational age at birth, including both a continuous and a binary outcome. Results: Ordinary and RE models provided disparity estimates that can be substantially biased in the presence of neighborhood confounding. Both FE and hybrid FE models can account for cluster level confounding and provide disparity estimates unconfounded by neighborhood, with the latter having greater flexibility in allowing estimation of neighborhood-level effects and intercept/slope variability when implemented in a RE specification. Conclusions: Given the range of models that can be implemented in a hybrid approach and the frequent goal of accounting for contextual confounding, this approach should be used more often. Published by Elsevier Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:683 / 690
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] A Comparison of Population-Averaged and Cluster-Specific Approaches in the Context of Unequal Probabilities of Selection
    Koziol, Natalie A.
    Bovaird, James A.
    Suarez, Sonia
    MULTIVARIATE BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH, 2017, 52 (03) : 325 - 349
  • [22] Role of contextual and compositional characteristics of schools for health inequalities in childhood and adolescence: a scoping review
    Herke, Max
    Moor, Irene
    Winter, Kristina
    Hack, Miriam
    Hoffmann, Stephanie
    Spallek, Jacob
    Hilger-Kolb, Jennifer
    Herr, Raphael
    Pischke, Claudia
    Dragano, Nico
    Novelli, Anna
    Richter, Matthias
    BMJ OPEN, 2022, 12 (02):
  • [23] Health Inequalities in Children and Adolescents: A Scoping Review of the Mediating and Moderating Effects of Family Characteristics
    Blume, Miriam
    Rattay, Petra
    Hoffmann, Stephanie
    Spallek, Jacob
    Sander, Lydia
    Herr, Raphael
    Richter, Matthias
    Moor, Irene
    Dragano, Nico
    Pischke, Claudia
    Iashchenko, Iryna
    Hoevener, Claudia
    Wachtler, Benjamin
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 18 (15)
  • [24] Cause and context: place-based approaches to investigate how environments affect mental health
    Lovasi, Gina S.
    Mooney, Stephen J.
    Muennig, Peter
    DiMaggio, Charles
    SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2016, 51 (12) : 1571 - 1579
  • [25] Educational inequalities in self-rated health and their mediators in late adulthood: Comparison of China and Japan
    Ping, Ruru
    Oshio, Takashi
    PLOS ONE, 2023, 18 (09):
  • [26] Aligning Method with Theory: A Comparison of Two Approaches to Modeling the Social Determinants of Health
    Patricia O’Campo
    Marcelo Urquia
    Maternal and Child Health Journal, 2012, 16 : 1870 - 1878
  • [27] Aligning Method with Theory: A Comparison of Two Approaches to Modeling the Social Determinants of Health
    O'Campo, Patricia
    Urquia, Marcelo
    MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL, 2012, 16 (09) : 1870 - 1878
  • [28] Social Capital and Health: A Review of Prospective Multilevel Studies
    Murayama, Hiroshi
    Fujiwara, Yoshinori
    Kawachi, Ichiro
    JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2012, 22 (03) : 179 - 187
  • [29] Application of the concept ‘avoidable mortality’ in assessing the socioeconomic status related inequalities in health: a scoping review
    Marouzi A.
    Plante C.
    Neudorf C.
    Discover Social Science and Health, 4 (1):
  • [30] Rural health enterprises in the EU context: a systematic literature review and research agenda
    Apostolopoulos, Nikolaos
    Ratten, Vanessa
    Stavroyiannis, Stavros
    Makris, Ilias
    Apostolopoulos, Sotiris
    Liargovas, Panagiotis
    JOURNAL OF ENTERPRISING COMMUNITIES-PEOPLE AND PLACES IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY, 2020, 14 (04) : 563 - 582