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Richard Scribner

Researcher at Louisiana State University

Publications -  15
Citations -  788

Richard Scribner is an academic researcher from Louisiana State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Public health. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 15 publications receiving 753 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard Scribner include LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans.

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Neighborhood Physical Conditions and Health

TL;DR: Boarded-up housing may be related to mortality risk because of its potential adverse impact on social relationships and opportunities to engage in healthful behaviors.
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Alcohol outlets, gonorrhea, and the Los Angeles civil unrest: a longitudinal analysis.

TL;DR: Neighborhood alcohol outlets appear to be significantly associated with changes in gonorrhea rates, and efforts to control sexually transmitted diseases, including Gonorrhea and HIV, should address contextual factors that facilitate high-risk behaviors and disease transmission.
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Multilevel spatio-temporal dual changepoint models for relating alcohol outlet destruction and changes in neighbourhood rates of assaultive violence

TL;DR: This paper evaluates the impact of the "1992 Civil Unrest" in Los Angeles, in which many alcohol outlets were damaged leading to a decrease in alcohol outlet density, on crime and develops a hierarchical model that controls for important covariates and accounts for unexplained spatial and temporal variability.
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The Neighborhood Alcohol Environment and Alcohol-Related Morbidity

TL;DR: The concept that off-premise alcohol outlets in the neighborhood environment may impact health and social outcomes, either directly or indirectly, through individual alcohol consumption and these associations may be heterogeneous with respect to race and ethnicity is supported.
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Social capital and the neighborhood alcohol environment

TL;DR: Neighborhood alcohol outlet density was strongly associated with reduced indicators of social capital, and the relationship between collective efficacy and outlet density appears to be mediated by perceived neighborhood safety.