| Literature DB >> 34281129 |
Sima Namin1, Yuhong Zhou1, Joan Neuner2, Kirsten Beyer1.
Abstract
There is a growing literature on the association between neighborhood contexts and cancer survivorship. To understand the current trends and the gaps in the literature, we aimed to answer the following questions: To what degree, and how, has cancer survivorship research accounted for neighborhood-level effects? What neighborhood metrics have been used to operationalize neighborhood factors? To what degree do the neighborhood level metrics considered in cancer research reflect neighborhood development as identified in the Leadership for Energy and Environmental Design for Neighborhood Development (LEED-ND) guidelines? We first conducted a review guided by PRISMA extension for scoping review of the extant literature on neighborhood effects and cancer survivorship outcomes from January 2000 to January 2021. Second, we categorized the studied neighborhood metrics under six main themes. Third, we assessed the findings based on the LEED-ND guidelines to identify the most relevant neighborhood metrics in association with areas of focus in cancer survivorship care and research. The search results were scoped to 291 relevant peer-reviewed journal articles. Results show that survivorship disparities, primary care, and weight management are the main themes in the literature. Additionally, most articles rely on neighborhood SES as the primary (or only) examined neighborhood level metric. We argue that the expansion of interdisciplinary research to include neighborhood metrics endorsed by current paradigms in salutogenic urban design can enhance the understanding of the role of socioecological context in survivorship care and outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: LEED-ND; cancer survivorship; health promotion; neighborhood characteristics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34281129 PMCID: PMC8297243 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18137192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Review process of the search results by search database guided by PRISMA. Medical indexes: PubMed, CINAHL. Interdisciplinary indexes: Scopus, Web of science. Social science indexes: ERIC, JSTOR, and PsychINFO.
Figure 2Main themes and primary neighborhood factors across the scoped articles.
Figure 3Main themes and the corresponding neighborhood metrics in the scoped articles.
LEED-ND Metrics for Healthy Neighborhoods [45,50] and the corresponding measures in the scoped articles.
| Area | LEED-ND Metrics | Metrics in the Scoped Articles |
|---|---|---|
| SLL | At least 35 intersections per km2. At least 50% of units in ¼ mile walking distance of transit. Minimum 60 weekday by transit service. Within a 1/4-mile walking distance of at least one bus or streetcar stop, or within a 1/2-mile walking distance of at least one bus rapid transit stop, light or heavy rail station, commuter rail station. Measures for minimum daily transit service for projects with multiple transit types. Within 1/4-mile bicycling distance of an existing bicycle network, that connects to mixed use destinations. At least 3 continuous miles. Within a 1/2-mile walking distance of existing full-time equivalent job. |
Gamma index as a measure of connectivity [ Presence of bike paths in public parks [ |
| NPD | 12 or more dwelling buildable land units per acre. At least 90–140 intersections per mi2. At least 4–7 diverse uses within 1/4 mile. Simpson Diversity Index score greater than 0.5. Proportion of rental and/or for-sale dwelling units priced for households earning less than the area median income (AMI). No more than 20% of the total neighborhood footprint area for all new off-street surface parking facilities. Continuous sidewalks or equivalent provisions for walking. Percentage length with speed for safe pedestrian and bicycle travel. Criteria for façades and entries of buildings in circulation network. Provide trees at intervals of no more than 50 feet along at least 60% of the neighborhood total existing blocks. Pedestrian or bicycle through-connections for 50% cul-de-sacs. Street network grid density within ¼ mile radius. Within a 1/4-mile walk of at least one civic and passive use space. Access and proximity to publicly accessible indoor recreational facility within ½ mile walking. Proximity to farmer’s market. Criteria for minimum neighborhood garden space. Community supported agriculture within 150 miles. |
Number of housing units per square mile [ Intersection density [ Presence of mixed-use on street segment [ Mixed housing [ Walkability scale [ Presence of tree shade [ Street network characteristics [ Percentage of land area comprised of both total green and open spaces for recreation and Park density [ Number recreational lefts within a buffer [ Produce density [ |