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Author Notes:

Ariana Gobaud, 722 West 168th Street, Rm 516, New York, NY 10032. Email: ang2167@cumc.columbia.edu

Violent crime data collection (both observed and estimated) was supported by the National Institutes of Drug Abuse under Award R01DA029513 (PI: Hannah LF Cooper), the National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number F31MH105238 (PI: DF Haley), and the Surgeon General C Everett Koop HIV/AIDS Research Grant (PI: DF Haley).

Subjects:

Keywords:

  • Science & Technology
  • Life Sciences & Biomedicine
  • Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
  • Crime
  • Residence characteristics
  • Preterm birth
  • Small-area data

Measuring small-area violent crime: a comparison of observed versus model-estimated crime rates and preterm birth

Tools:

Journal Title:

ANNALS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY

Volume:

Volume 55

Publisher:

, Pages 27-33

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Purpose: Research examining the association between crime and health outcomes has been hampered by a lack of reliable small-area (e.g., census tract or census block group) crime data. Our objective is to assess the accuracy of synthetically estimated crime indices for use in health research by using preterm birth as a case study. Methods: We used violent crime data reported by 47 law enforcement agencies in 15 counties in Atlanta, Georgia and compared them with commercially estimated crime rates from the same year to assess (1) how two measures of crime were correlated and (2) if the associations between violent crime rate indices and preterm birth (PTB) varied as a function of the source of crime index. To assess the association between violent crime and PTB, we used multilevel logistic regression and controlled for potential individual- and neighborhood-level confounders. Results: Violent crime, both estimated and observed, was positively correlated with poverty, neighborhood proportion Black, and neighborhood deprivation index; however, the association was stronger using estimated rates as compared with observed crime rates. The association between living in a high violent crime neighborhood and PTB was only consistent for white women across the two crime indices after covariate adjustment. For Black women, the association between living in a high violent crime neighborhood and PTB is systematically underestimated across all models when the estimated crime rate is used. Conclusions: There is evidence that model-estimated crime rates are not reliable proxies for crime in an urban area even when appropriate confounders are adjusted for.

Copyright information:

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/rdf).
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