Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson1, Brittney Butler1, Shibani Chettri1, Hikma Elmi1, Allison Stevens2, Chinenye Bosah3, Rhonda Dailey4, Dawn P Misra4. 1. Ohio State University, College of Public Health, Division of Epidemiology, Columbus, OH. 2. Ohio State University, College of Public Health, Division of Health Behavior Health Promotion, Columbus, OH. 3. Ohio State University, Columbus, OH. 4. Wayne State University, School of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine and Population Health Sciences, Detroit, MI.
Abstract
Introduction: Housing stability is an important determinant of health, but no studies to our knowledge have examined the spill-over effects of neighborhood eviction rates on individual risk of preterm birth (PTB) among African American women. Objective: We assessed whether living in a neighborhood with high eviction rates was associated with risk of PTB among African American women, and whether marital/cohabiting status modified the association. Methods: We spatially linked interview, medical record, and current address data from the Life-course Influences on Fetal Environments Study (2009-2011, N=1386) of postpartum African American women from Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan, to publicly available data on block-group level rates of eviction filings and judgements. PTB was defined as birth before 37 completed weeks of gestation and occurred in 16.3% of the sample (n=226). Eviction rate variables were rescaled by their interquartile ranges (75th vs 25th percentiles). Women self-reported whether they were married to, or cohabiting with, the father of their baby during the in-person interview. We used Modified Poisson regression with robust error variance to estimate relative risks of PTB associated with each eviction variable separately and included an interaction term with marital/cohabiting status (P<.10 considered significant) in adjusted models. Results: In the overall sample, neighborhood eviction filings and judgements did not predict PTB, but the associations were modified by marital/cohabiting status (P for interaction = .02, and .06, respectively). Among women who were married/cohabiting, those who lived in neighborhoods with high eviction filings (adjusted relative risk: 1.25, 95% CI: 1.06, 1.47) and eviction judgements (adjusted relative risk: 1.18, 95% CI: 1.05, 1.33) had higher risk of PTB than women who did not. Little evidence of an association was observed for women who were not married/cohabiting. Conclusions: Future studies should examine the mechanisms of the reported associations to identify novel intervention targets (eg, addressing landlord discrimination) and policy solutions (eg, ensuring a living wage and providing affordable housing assistance to everyone who qualifies) to reduce the burden of PTB among African Americans.
Introduction: Housing stability is an important determinant of health, but no studies to our knowledge have examined the spill-over effects of neighborhood eviction rates on individual risk of preterm birth (PTB) among African American women. Objective: We assessed whether living in a neighborhood with high eviction rates was associated with risk of PTB among African American women, and whether marital/cohabiting status modified the association. Methods: We spatially linked interview, medical record, and current address data from the Life-course Influences on Fetal Environments Study (2009-2011, N=1386) of postpartum African American women from Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan, to publicly available data on block-group level rates of eviction filings and judgements. PTB was defined as birth before 37 completed weeks of gestation and occurred in 16.3% of the sample (n=226). Eviction rate variables were rescaled by their interquartile ranges (75th vs 25th percentiles). Women self-reported whether they were married to, or cohabiting with, the father of their baby during the in-person interview. We used Modified Poisson regression with robust error variance to estimate relative risks of PTB associated with each eviction variable separately and included an interaction term with marital/cohabiting status (P<.10 considered significant) in adjusted models. Results: In the overall sample, neighborhood eviction filings and judgements did not predict PTB, but the associations were modified by marital/cohabiting status (P for interaction = .02, and .06, respectively). Among women who were married/cohabiting, those who lived in neighborhoods with high eviction filings (adjusted relative risk: 1.25, 95% CI: 1.06, 1.47) and eviction judgements (adjusted relative risk: 1.18, 95% CI: 1.05, 1.33) had higher risk of PTB than women who did not. Little evidence of an association was observed for women who were not married/cohabiting. Conclusions: Future studies should examine the mechanisms of the reported associations to identify novel intervention targets (eg, addressing landlord discrimination) and policy solutions (eg, ensuring a living wage and providing affordable housing assistance to everyone who qualifies) to reduce the burden of PTB among African Americans.
Authors: Deborah Karasek; Rebecca J Baer; Monica R McLemore; April J Bell; Bridgette E Blebu; Joan A Casey; Kimberly Coleman-Phox; Jean M Costello; Jennifer N Felder; Elena Flowers; Jonathan D Fuchs; Anu Manchikanti Gomez; Kayla Karvonen; Miriam Kuppermann; Liang Liang; Safyer McKenzie-Sampson; Charles E McCulloch; Scott P Oltman; Matthew S Pantell; Xianhua Piao; Aric A Prather; Rebecca J Schmidt; Karen A Scott; Solaire Spellen; Jodi D Stookey; Martha Tesfalul; Larry Rand; Laura L Jelliffe-Pawlowski Journal: Lancet Reg Health Am Date: 2021-07-30