The Great Recession precipitated unprecedented home foreclosures increases, but documentation of related neighborhood changes and population health is scant. Using the Detroit Neighborhood Health Study (N = 277), we examined associations between neighborhood-level recession indicators and thymic function, a life course immunological health indicator. In covariate-adjusted multilevel models, each 10 percentage point increase in abandoned home prevalence and 1 percentage point increase in 2009 home foreclosures was associated with 1.7-year and 3.3-year increases in thymic aging, respectively. Associations attenuated after adjustment for neighborhood-level social cohesion, suggesting community ties may buffer recession-related immune aging. Ef...
This study investigates the relationship between economic conditions and health. Total mortality and...
We investigate the impacts of the dramatic increases in state unemployment rates that accompanied th...
The effects of city and neighbourhood contexts on individuals’ well-being have long garnered sociolo...
The Great Recession precipitated unprecedented home foreclosures increases, but documentation of rel...
Foreclosure rates reached unprecedented levels in the United States during the Great Recession. Duri...
Given documented links between individual socioeconomic status (SES) and health, it is likely that—i...
In 2009, more than 2.8 million housing units in the U.S. received a foreclosure notice. That represe...
Objectives: We examined the impact of long-term (6 months or more) vacant housing and various durati...
I estimate the effects of U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) housing prices on a variety of he...
Historical practices, such as housing discrimination in Detroit, have been shown to have lasting imp...
Health disparities by neighborhoods in the US continue to exist. Investigation of immunological biom...
In contrast to a large literature investigating neighborhood effects on health, few studies have exa...
peer reviewedThe changing economic fortunes of cities influence mental health. However, the mechanis...
We advance scholarship about how macroeconomic forces differentially manifest themselves across loca...
Residential context, from the broader structural factors, like racial residential segregation, to th...
This study investigates the relationship between economic conditions and health. Total mortality and...
We investigate the impacts of the dramatic increases in state unemployment rates that accompanied th...
The effects of city and neighbourhood contexts on individuals’ well-being have long garnered sociolo...
The Great Recession precipitated unprecedented home foreclosures increases, but documentation of rel...
Foreclosure rates reached unprecedented levels in the United States during the Great Recession. Duri...
Given documented links between individual socioeconomic status (SES) and health, it is likely that—i...
In 2009, more than 2.8 million housing units in the U.S. received a foreclosure notice. That represe...
Objectives: We examined the impact of long-term (6 months or more) vacant housing and various durati...
I estimate the effects of U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) housing prices on a variety of he...
Historical practices, such as housing discrimination in Detroit, have been shown to have lasting imp...
Health disparities by neighborhoods in the US continue to exist. Investigation of immunological biom...
In contrast to a large literature investigating neighborhood effects on health, few studies have exa...
peer reviewedThe changing economic fortunes of cities influence mental health. However, the mechanis...
We advance scholarship about how macroeconomic forces differentially manifest themselves across loca...
Residential context, from the broader structural factors, like racial residential segregation, to th...
This study investigates the relationship between economic conditions and health. Total mortality and...
We investigate the impacts of the dramatic increases in state unemployment rates that accompanied th...
The effects of city and neighbourhood contexts on individuals’ well-being have long garnered sociolo...