Extracted text; The relationship between residential segregation and overweight/obesity among African-American adults remains unclear. Elucidating that relationship is relevant to efforts to prevent and to reduce racial disparities in obesity. This article provides a critical review of the 11 empirical studies of segregation and overweight/obesity among African-American adults. Results revealed that most studies did not use a valid measure of segregation, many did not use a valid measure of overweight/obesity, and many did not control for neighborhood poverty. Only four (36% of the) studies used valid measures of both segregation and overweight/obesity and also controlled for area-poverty. Those four studies suggest that segregation contrib...
Recent research suggests that racial residential segregation may be detrimental to health. This stud...
ObjectivesRacial residential segregation affects food landscapes that dictate residents’ food enviro...
Youth obesity prevalence remains high, despite decades of intervention. Grounded in the social ecolo...
The relationship between residential segregation and overweight/obesity among African-American adult...
Background: This study examined the association between residential segregation and obesity for Whit...
While the segmentation of residential areas by race is well known to affect the social and economic ...
Data indicate that the health of Blacks who reside in segregated Black neighborhoods is significantl...
This article reveals race differentials in obesity as both an individual- and neighborhood-level phe...
African Americans have a higher prevalence of obesity compared to any other racial/ethnic group due ...
The present study used nationally representative data from the U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics (...
We used cross-sectional data on 2,660 black and 2,611 Mexican-American adult participants in the Nat...
This study investigates the association between neighborhood racial composition and adult obesity ri...
The purpose of this study was to examine the socio-demographic and behavioral differences related to...
The purpose of this study was to examine the socio-demographic and behavioral differences related to...
BACKGROUND: Obesity is more prevalent among Black women than Black men, but there is little informat...
Recent research suggests that racial residential segregation may be detrimental to health. This stud...
ObjectivesRacial residential segregation affects food landscapes that dictate residents’ food enviro...
Youth obesity prevalence remains high, despite decades of intervention. Grounded in the social ecolo...
The relationship between residential segregation and overweight/obesity among African-American adult...
Background: This study examined the association between residential segregation and obesity for Whit...
While the segmentation of residential areas by race is well known to affect the social and economic ...
Data indicate that the health of Blacks who reside in segregated Black neighborhoods is significantl...
This article reveals race differentials in obesity as both an individual- and neighborhood-level phe...
African Americans have a higher prevalence of obesity compared to any other racial/ethnic group due ...
The present study used nationally representative data from the U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics (...
We used cross-sectional data on 2,660 black and 2,611 Mexican-American adult participants in the Nat...
This study investigates the association between neighborhood racial composition and adult obesity ri...
The purpose of this study was to examine the socio-demographic and behavioral differences related to...
The purpose of this study was to examine the socio-demographic and behavioral differences related to...
BACKGROUND: Obesity is more prevalent among Black women than Black men, but there is little informat...
Recent research suggests that racial residential segregation may be detrimental to health. This stud...
ObjectivesRacial residential segregation affects food landscapes that dictate residents’ food enviro...
Youth obesity prevalence remains high, despite decades of intervention. Grounded in the social ecolo...