New @ ESIN

Upcoming Events

2011 American Men's Studies Association Conference: Men, Masculi
Deadline for Submissions: October 31, 2010
5th Annual International Conference on Sociology
Call for Papers and Participation, Deadline: October 11, 2010
Addiction Health Services Research Conference 2010
Monday October 25 - Wednesday October 27, 2010

ESIN News

Funding Opportunity
Sociological Initiatives Foundation Offers Grants to Support Social Change Research
ESIN Congratulates
Robert Turner, Ph.D.
Social Work Resource
The Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research presents their new website
Professional Opportunity
Kaiser Permanente Medical Center, Postdoctoral Fellowships in Clinical Psychology

Scientific Update

A Meta-Study of Black Male Mental Health and Well-Being
D.C. Watkins, R.L. Walker, and D.M. Griffith
Black Male Teachers Needed: An Editorial
I.A. Toldson

Scientific News

The Changing Distribution and Determinants of Obesity...

J.L. Black and J. Macinko

2010-02-23 09:31:37

The Changing Distribution and Determinants of Obesity in the Neighborhoods
of New York City, 2003-2007

Jennifer L. Black and James Macinko
Am. J. Epidemiol. published 19 February 2010, 10.1093/aje/kwp458
http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/kwp458v1?ct=ct

Obesity (body mass index ≥30 kg/m2) is a growing urban health concern, but few studies have examined whether, how, or why obesity prevalence has changed over time within cities. This study characterized the individual- and neighborhood-level determinants and distribution of obesity in New York City from 2003 to 2007. Individual-level data from the Community Health Survey (n = 48,506 adults, 34 neighborhoods) were combined with neighborhood measures. Multilevel regression assessed changes in obesity over time and associations with neighborhood-level income and food and physical activity amenities, controlling for age, racial/ethnic identity, education, employment, US nativity, and marital status, stratified by gender. Obesity rates increased by 1.6% (P < 0.05) each year, but changes over time differed significantly between neighborhoods and by gender. Obesity prevalence increased for women, even after controlling for individual- and neighborhood-level factors (prevalence ratio = 1.021, P < 0.05), whereas no significant changes were reported for men. Neighborhood factors including increased area income (prevalence ratio = 0.932) and availability of local food and fitness amenities (prevalence ratio = 0.889) were significantly associated with reduced obesity (P < 0.001). Findings suggest that policies to reduce obesity in urban environments must be informed by up-to-date surveillance data and may require a variety of initiatives that respond to both individual and contextual determinants of obesity.

Back to scientific news

Excellent Scholarship is a Prerequisite for Social Change

:: an ianncomm site ::