2014
DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2014.0679
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The Child Opportunity Index: Improving Collaboration Between Community Development And Public Health

Abstract: Improving neighborhood environments for children through community development and other interventions may help improve children's health and reduce inequities in health. A first step is to develop a population-level surveillance system of children's neighborhood environments. This article presents the newly developed Child Opportunity Index for the 100 largest US metropolitan areas. The index examines the extent of racial/ethnic inequity in the distribution of children across levels of neighborhood opportunit… Show more

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Cited by 220 publications
(194 citation statements)
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“…The Index includes 19 variables across three domains specific to educational, health and environmental, and social and economic opportunities, conditions, and resources. (15) Z-scores are calculated and standardized for the metropolitan area based on the distribution of the variables within that area – these Z-scores enumerate the number of standard deviations that census tract’s variable (or domain) is from the region’s mean tract. The Z-scores allow for analyses of within-region variation with respect to each variable, each domain, and for the COI as a whole.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The Index includes 19 variables across three domains specific to educational, health and environmental, and social and economic opportunities, conditions, and resources. (15) Z-scores are calculated and standardized for the metropolitan area based on the distribution of the variables within that area – these Z-scores enumerate the number of standard deviations that census tract’s variable (or domain) is from the region’s mean tract. The Z-scores allow for analyses of within-region variation with respect to each variable, each domain, and for the COI as a whole.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The COI, crafted by diversitydatakids.org in collaboration with the Kirwan Institute, defines “opportunity” as “neighborhood-based conditions and resources conducive to healthy child development.”(15) This publically-available and easily-accessible index includes a range of measures, enumerating relative opportunity in educational, health and environmental, and social and economic domains across all census tracts within metropolitan areas. (16, 17) Though the index has been previously linked to life expectancy, low birth weight, and preterm birth,(15) it has not yet been linked to asthma morbidity. Establishing such a link could provide a more informed approach to identifying and addressing potentially-correctable inequities across or within metropolitan areas.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Individuals with low education and income are more likely than better-educated, higher-income individuals to lack a stable job, safe housing, food security and adequate income to meet health needs. Inequity in resources result in increased morbidity and mortality and these interactions have a cumulative effect over the life course for individuals, families and communities [10][11][12][13][14][15][16].…”
Section: Social Determinants Of Health and Health Inequitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research that accounts for historical context [19] in patterns of health over space and time will be especially valuable to understanding the social processes underlying health development. Local level data revealing the spatial patterns of health outcomes and correlations to income, housing, education, and other important social determinants of health can be used in a call to action to develop cross-sector partnerships, policy analysis, and innovative solutions [20]. Public health departments and epidemiologists can also partner with local organizations to lend data expertise and a credible voice to policy advocacy efforts [21].…”
Section: Making the Case: Using Data As A Call To Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%