Phantom of the Area: Poverty-Area Residence and Mortality in the United States.
Waitzman, Norman J. PhD; Smith, Ken R. PhD
[Miscellaneous]
American Journal of Public Health.
88(6):973-976, June 1998.
(Format: HTML)
Objectives: The purpose of the study was to conduct a national multivariate analysis on poverty-area residence and mortality in the United States.
Methods: Proportional hazards analyses were performed of the effect of poverty-area residence on the risk of mortality among adult examinees in the 1971 through 1974 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey who were followed through 1987.
Results: Poverty-area residence was associated with significantly elevated risk of all-cause mortality (rate ratio = 1.78, 95% confidence interval = 1.33, 2.38) and some cause-specific mortality among those aged 25 through 54 years, but not among those aged 55 through 74 years, at baseline after adjustment for several individual and household characteristics.
Conclusions: Residence, in poverty areas contributes to socioeconomic gradients in mortality among nonelderly adults in the United States. (Am J Public Health. 1998;88:973-976)
Copyright (C) 1998 by the American Public Health Association, Inc.