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Journal ArticleDOI

Health profiles of Hamilton: Spatial characterisation of neighbourhoods for health investigations

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TLDR
In this article, a mixed-methods approach was employed to study the determinants of health at the local level using specific neighborhoods in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and the results reveal a pattern of distinct neighbourhoods that will be used in subsequent quantitative and qualitative stages in the larger research program.
Abstract
This paper is part of a larger research program which employs a mixed-methods approach to study the determinants of health at the local level using specific neighborhoods in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. In this paper, multivariate, spatial statistical techniques and geographic information systems are used to address questions about the characterization of neighbourhoods, based on socioeconomic determinants of health and risk factors such as smoking. While neighbourhood characterization has been a component of public health surveillance for some time, geostatistical techniques can now be used to derive more accurate representation of neighbourhoods for use in subsequent analysis. We utilize principal components analysis to reduce the data and extract the components that represent the underlying local processes. Principal components are also overlayed on comparative mortality figures to visualize where the socio-demographic determinants of health correspond spatially with mortality patterns. Predicted values from the components are then analysed for spatial clustering using local indicators of spatial association. The findings reveal a pattern of distinct neighbourhoods that will be used in subsequent quantitative and qualitative stages in the larger research programme. The results can also be used to inform public health policy and to target public health interventions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial analysis of air pollution and mortality in Los Angeles.

TL;DR: The results suggest the chronic health effects associated with within-city gradients in exposure to PM2.5 may be even larger than previously reported across metropolitan areas, and nearly 3 times greater than in models relying on comparisons between communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Who you know, where you live: social capital, neighbourhood and health

TL;DR: The neighbourhood and associational involvement relationships with health were not dependent upon one another, suggesting that neighbourhood of residence did not help to explain the positive health effects of this particular measure of social capital.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neighbourhoods and health: a GIS approach to measuring community resource accessibility

TL;DR: The development of an innovative methodology to measure geographical access to a range of community resources that have been empirically linked to health to enable health researchers to examine with greater precision, variations in the material characteristics of neighbourhoods and the pathways through which neighbourhoods impact on specific health outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do socioeconomic characteristics modify the short term association between air pollution and mortality? Evidence from a zonal time series in Hamilton, Canada

TL;DR: Low educational attainment and high manufacturing employment in the zones significantly and positively modified the acute mortality effects of air pollution exposure, and increased mortality was associated with air pollution Exposure in a citywide model and in intra-urban zones with lower socioeconomic characteristics.
Journal Article

Relation between income, air pollution and mortality: a cohort study

TL;DR: Two of the broader determinants of health--income and air pollution levels--were important correlates of mortality in this population of people whose lung function was tested and were associated with mortality differences.
References
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Book

Using multivariate statistics

TL;DR: In this Section: 1. Multivariate Statistics: Why? and 2. A Guide to Statistical Techniques: Using the Book Research Questions and Associated Techniques.
Book

Principal Component Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a graphical representation of data using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) for time series and other non-independent data, as well as a generalization and adaptation of principal component analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local Indicators of Spatial Association—LISA

TL;DR: In this paper, a new general class of local indicators of spatial association (LISA) is proposed, which allow for the decomposition of global indicators, such as Moran's I, into the contribution of each observation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The varimax criterion for analytic rotation in factor analysis

TL;DR: In this article, an analytic criterion for rotation is defined and the scientific advantage of analytic criteria over subjective (graphical) rotational procedures is discussed, and a computational outline for the orthogonal normal varimax is appended.
Book

Statistical Methods in Cancer Research

N. E. Breslow
TL;DR: Statistical methods in cancer research as mentioned in this paper, Statistical Methods in Cancer Research, Statistical methods in Cancer research, Statistical methods for cancer research, کتابخانه مرکزی دانشگاه علوم پزش