| Literature DB >> 29258489 |
Aline Almeida Bentes1,2, Cibele Comini César3,4, César Coelho Xavier4,5, Waleska Teixeira Caiaffa4, Fernando Augusto Proietti3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Self-rated health (SRH) is the general perception of an individual's own health and a key indicator to measure health in population-based studies. Few studies have examined the association between perceived urban violence and SRH among young adults. There were an estimated 475,000 deaths in 2012 as a result of homicide on the world. Sixty percent of these deaths occurred among males aged 15-44 years, making homicide the third leading cause of death for this population group. This study aimed to determine and quantify the association between sex-specific perception of violence in the neighborhood and SRH among young adults.Entities:
Keywords: Perceived urban violence; Self-rated health; Urban population health; Young adults (18–29 years)
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29258489 PMCID: PMC5738073 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4969-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the contribution of neighborhood environment to health, adapt from Diez Roux and Mair [13]
Frequency distribution by sex of self-rated health (SRH) and selected variables among 955 young adults (18–29 years). Belo Horizonte Health Study, Brazil, 2008–2009
| Variable | Total | Females | Males |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | 955 (100) | 519 (54,35) | 436 (45,65) |
| Self-rated health | |||
| Very good/good | 779 (81,70) | 413 (79,70) | 366 (83,90) |
| Fair/poor/very poor | 175 (18,30) | 105 (20,30) | 70 (16,10) |
| Perceived violence score | 1,21- 4,85 ( | 1,21 - 4,85 ( | 1,21 - 4,65 ( |
| Time residing in the same neighborhood | ( | ( | ( |
| Age (years): | |||
| 18–24 | 523 (54,80) | 268 (51,60) | 255 (58,50) |
| 25–29 | 432 (45,20) | 251 (48,40) | 181 (41,50) |
| Marital state | |||
| Married/living together | 312 (32,67) | 199 (38,34) | 113 (25,90) |
| Single, divorced/separated | 643 (67,33) | 320 (61,66) | 323 (74,10) |
| Educational level | |||
| Able to read, primary school, 1st-4th grades not completed, 1st-4th grade completed, 5th-8th grade not completed | 216 (22,64) | 123 (23,70) | 93 (22,20) |
| 5th-8th grade completed, high school not completed | 483 (50,63) | 261 (50,40) | 222 (50,10) |
| High school graduate, technical school, attended university | 176 (18,45) | 86 (16,60) | 90 (20,60) |
| University graduate, post-undergraduate studies | 79 (8,28) | 48 (9,30) | 31 (7,10) |
| Socioeconomic position scorea | |||
| 1 | 213 (22,40) | 136 (26,20) | 77 (17,70) |
| 2 | 184 (19,30) | 110 (21,20) | 74 (17,00) |
| 3 | 185 (19,40) | 89 (17,20) | 96 (22,00) |
| 4 | 193 (20,30) | 95 (18,30) | 98 (22,50) |
| 5 | 178 (18,70) | 89 (17,20) | 89 (20,40) |
| Alcohol consumption | |||
| Non-drinker | 608 (63,67) | 378 (72,80) | 230 (52,70) |
| Moderate consumption | 111 (11,62) | 56 (10,80) | 55 (12,60) |
| Excessive consumption | 236 (24,71) | 85 (16,40) | 151 (34,60) |
| Smoking | |||
| Yes | 154 (16,10) | 74(14,30) | 80 (18,40) |
| No | 801 (83,90) | 445 (85,70) | 356 (81,60) |
| Satisfied with his/her own weight | |||
| Yes | 417 (43,70) | 194 (37,38) | 223 (51,20) |
| No | 538 (57,30) | 325 (62,62) | 213 (48,80) |
| Physical activity | |||
| Yes | 376 (39,40) | 134 (25,80) | 242 (55,50) |
| No | 579 (60,60) | 385 (74,20) | 194 (44,50) |
| Healthy diet | |||
| Yes | 314 (32,90) | 185 (35,65) | 129 (29,60) |
| No | 641 (67,10) | 334 (64,35) | 307 (70,40) |
| Chronic disease | |||
| Yes | 339 (35,53) | 233 (44,89) | 106 (24,37) |
| No | 615 (64,47) | 286 (55,11) | 329 (75,63) |
Missing data: chronic disease (n = 7), SRH (n = 1), education level (n = 1), and socioeconomic score (n = 2). a. SPS: Score ranging from 0 to 3.39; higher number of assets = higher score
Odds ratio and confidence intervals for the sex-specific association between selected variables and self-rated health (SRH) among 955 young adults (18–29 years). Belo Horizonte Health Study (BHS), Belo Horizonte, Brazil, 2008 -2009. Univariate analysis
| Variable | SRH Females | SRH Males |
|---|---|---|
| Perceived violence score | 1,46 (0,98-2,17) | 1,27 (0,79-2,07) |
| Time residing in the same neighborhood | 0,98 (0,95-1,02) | 1,00 (0,97-1,04) |
| Age (years): | ||
| 18–24 | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| 25–29 | 0,54 (0,31-0,96) | 0,74 (0,38-1,44) |
| Marital state | ||
| Single, divorced/separated | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Married/living together | 1,93 (1,10-3,51) | 1,74 (0,93-3,30) |
| Educational level | ||
| Able to read, primary school, 1st-4th grades not completed, 1st-4th grade completed, 5th-8th grade not completed | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| 5th-8th grade completed, high school not completed | 0,66 (0,33-1,33) | 0,52 (0,24-1,12) |
| High school graduate, technical school, attended university | 0,55 (0,23-1,26) | 0,51 (0,19-1370 |
| University graduate, post-undergraduate studies | 0,04 (0,01-0,18) | 0,71 (0,11-4,54) |
| Socioeconomic position scorea | ||
| 1 | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| 2 | 0,46 (0,23-0,93) | 0,62 (0,02-1,68) |
| 3 | 0,29 (0,13-0,66) | 0,44 (0,18-1,10) |
| 4 | 0,27 (0,11-0,63) | 0,23 (0,08-0,63) |
| 5 | 0,15 (0,05-0,45) | 0,43 (0,15-1,21) |
| Alcohol consumption | ||
| No | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Yes | 1,05 (0,73-1,51) | 1,24 (0,85-1,80) |
| Smoking | ||
| No | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Yes | 1,41 (0,65-3,03) | 3,81 (1,74-8,35) |
| Healthy diet | ||
| No | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Yes | 0,35 (0,18-0,69) | 0,43(0,20-0,94) |
| Satisfied with his/her own weight | ||
| No | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Yes | 0,40 (0,21-0,77) | 0,39 (0,19-0,77) |
| Physical activity | ||
| No | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Yes | 0,51 (0,27-0,96) | 0,41 (0,20-0,84) |
| Chronic disease | ||
| No | 1,00 | 1,00 |
| Yes | 2,16 (1,24-3,77) | 4,10 (1,98-8,50) |
a Socioeconomic position score score ranging from 0-3.39: highest number of assets = highest score
Perceived urban violence on health self-assessment in each of the hierarchical models for all, females and males participants for 955 young adults (18-29 years). Belo Horizonte Health Study, Belo Horizonte, Brazil, 2008–2009
| Models | SRH Total | SRH Females | SRH Males |
|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | 1,40 (1,05-1,87) | 1,46 (0,99-2,16) | 1,27 (0,79-2,03) |
| Model 2 | 1,37 (1,02-1,84) | 1,47 (1,00-2,17) | 1,15 (0,72-1,83) |
| Model 3 | 1,38 (1,03-1,86) | 1,54 (1,06-2,25) | 1,15 (0,71-1,85) |
| Model 4 | 1,28 (0,96-1,71) | 1,47 (1,04-2,09) | 1,05 (0,64-1,73) |
| Model 5 | 1,27 (0,94-1,72) | 1,47 (1,02-2,12) | 1,02 (0,59-1,75) |
| Model 6 | 1,28 (0,94-1,74) | 1,52 (1,04-2,21) | 0,94 (0,52-1,68) |
Model 1: Urban Violence Perceived Score
Model 2: Model 1 plus years residing in the neighborhood
Model 3: Model 2 plus age, sex (for all participants only) and marital status
Model 4: Model 3 plus schooling and socioeconomic position score
Model 5: Model 4 plus alcohol consumption, smoking, healthy diet and physical activity
Model 6: Model 5 plus satisfied with his/her own weight and reporting of chronic diseases