The contribution of neighborhood social disorganization to sexually transmitted infection biomarkers

Citation

Ford, Jodi L. & Browning, Christopher R. (2010). The contribution of neighborhood social disorganization to sexually transmitted infection biomarkers. Annual Meeting of the Population Association of America. Dallas, TX.

Abstract

This study examined the contribution of neighborhood social disorganization to sexually transmitted infection (STI) among young adults in the U.S. using Wave III of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. The dependent variable, STI, was a urine biomarker measure of chlamydia, gonorrhea and trichomoniasis. Neighborhood social disorganization was measured via three indicators: concentrated poverty, residential instability and ethnic heterogeneity. Hierarchical generalized linear modeling was employed to adjust for the nesting of individuals within neighborhoods. Findings indicated that 6.9% of the young adults had a positive STI urine screen. Preliminary analyses found that neighorhood concentrated poverty was significantly associated with having an STI, after adjusting for individual and neighborhood controls. Additional analyses will examine cross-level interactions to determine the extent to which associations between neighborhood social disorganization and STI vary by individual sociodemographic factors.

Reference Type

Conference proceeding

Book Title

Annual Meeting of the Population Association of America

Author(s)

Ford, Jodi L.
Browning, Christopher R.

Year Published

2010

City of Publication

Dallas, TX

Reference ID

7478