The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records

Introduction We know that rates of adverse pregnancy outcome such as low birthweight and preterm births vary both by socio-economic status and across geographical areas. Furthermore, more deprived neighbourhoods show higher rates of adverse outcomes. However, much of the evidence comes from cross-s...

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Main Authors: Tom Clemens, Chris Dibben
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2018-09-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/902
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spelling doaj-d83df175995e4d28ab33b3210e663e462020-11-25T01:03:13ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082018-09-013410.23889/ijpds.v3i4.902902The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative recordsTom Clemens0Chris Dibben1University of EdinburghUniversity of Edinburgh Introduction We know that rates of adverse pregnancy outcome such as low birthweight and preterm births vary both by socio-economic status and across geographical areas. Furthermore, more deprived neighbourhoods show higher rates of adverse outcomes. However, much of the evidence comes from cross-sectional observational studies where causality is difficult to assess. Objectives and Approach Neighbourhood crime and a resultant increase in maternal stress is a plausible explanation for the deprivation-birth outcome relationship. Without an experiment, isolating this pathway from other confounding effects is challenging. Because many mothers (within the Scottish maternity dataset) experience multiple pregnancies and varying exposure for the same person, we can assume a quasi-experimental allocation to exposure. We model associations as both within mother (comparing exposures between pregnancies to the same mother) and between mother (comparing different people between more and less deprived areas) partitioning the variation and effects accordingly. Results We find that both composite neighbourhood deprivation and neighbourhood crime specifically is associated with reduced birthweight. However, the composite neighbourhood deprivation measure is only significant when modelled as a between mother effect. Neighbourhood crime on the other hand is significantly associated with both between mother and within mother effects (though the latter is reduced compared to the former). These results suggest that much of the observed relationship with deprivation in general is therefore confounded by factors associated with the composition of individuals in these areas rather than an area deprivation effect per se. In contrast, the association with neighbourhood crime can be considered in isolation from the composition of individuals and is therefore likely to be an independent “area” effect. Conclusion/Implications These results are important because outcomes of pregnancy including birthweight and premature births influence health and social outcomes not just in infancy but across the life course. This study suggests policies targeting neighbourhood crime may help to reduce neighbourhood disparities in pregnancy outcomes and therefore health inequalities in general. https://ijpds.org/article/view/902
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tom Clemens
Chris Dibben
spellingShingle Tom Clemens
Chris Dibben
The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Tom Clemens
Chris Dibben
author_sort Tom Clemens
title The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
title_short The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
title_full The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
title_fullStr The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
title_full_unstemmed The effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. A quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
title_sort effect of neighbourhood crime and deprivation on pregnancy outcomes. a quasi-experimental study using routine administrative records
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Introduction We know that rates of adverse pregnancy outcome such as low birthweight and preterm births vary both by socio-economic status and across geographical areas. Furthermore, more deprived neighbourhoods show higher rates of adverse outcomes. However, much of the evidence comes from cross-sectional observational studies where causality is difficult to assess. Objectives and Approach Neighbourhood crime and a resultant increase in maternal stress is a plausible explanation for the deprivation-birth outcome relationship. Without an experiment, isolating this pathway from other confounding effects is challenging. Because many mothers (within the Scottish maternity dataset) experience multiple pregnancies and varying exposure for the same person, we can assume a quasi-experimental allocation to exposure. We model associations as both within mother (comparing exposures between pregnancies to the same mother) and between mother (comparing different people between more and less deprived areas) partitioning the variation and effects accordingly. Results We find that both composite neighbourhood deprivation and neighbourhood crime specifically is associated with reduced birthweight. However, the composite neighbourhood deprivation measure is only significant when modelled as a between mother effect. Neighbourhood crime on the other hand is significantly associated with both between mother and within mother effects (though the latter is reduced compared to the former). These results suggest that much of the observed relationship with deprivation in general is therefore confounded by factors associated with the composition of individuals in these areas rather than an area deprivation effect per se. In contrast, the association with neighbourhood crime can be considered in isolation from the composition of individuals and is therefore likely to be an independent “area” effect. Conclusion/Implications These results are important because outcomes of pregnancy including birthweight and premature births influence health and social outcomes not just in infancy but across the life course. This study suggests policies targeting neighbourhood crime may help to reduce neighbourhood disparities in pregnancy outcomes and therefore health inequalities in general.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/902
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