Abstract
Annual Review of Public Health
Vol. 26:
341-365
(Volume publication date April 2005)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.publhealth.26.021304.144708)
First published online as a Review in Advance on August 18, 2004URBAN HEALTH: Evidence, Challenges, and Directions Sandro Galea and David VlahovCenter for Urban Epidemiologic Studies, New York Academy of Medicine, and Department of Epidemiology, Joseph T. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10029; email: sgalea@nyam.org; dvlahov@nyam.org ▪ Abstract Urbanization is one of the most important demographic shifts worldwide during the past century and represents a substantial change from how most of the world's population has lived for the past several thousand years. The study of urban health considers how characteristics of the urban environment may affect population health. This paper reviews the empirical research assessing urban living's impact on population health and our rationale for considering the study of urban health as a distinct field of inquiry. The key factors affecting health in cities can be considered within three broad themes: the physical environment, the social environment, and access to health and social services. The methodologic and conceptual challenges facing the study of urban health, arising both from the limitations of the research to date and from the complexities inherent in assessing the relations among complex urban systems, disease causation, and health are discussed. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome and its relationship with leisure time physical activity among Peruvian adults European Journal of Clinical Investigation (2009) Quantification of Urbanization in Relation to Chronic Diseases in Developing Countries: A Systematic Review Journal of Urban Health 85(6):938-951 (2008) Do Neighborhood Economic Characteristics, Racial Composition, and Residential Stability Predict Perceptions of Stress Associated with the Physical and Social Environment? Findings from a Multilevel Analysis in Detroit Journal of Urban Health 85(5):642-661 (2008) Is urbanization a risk factor for substance misuse? Current Opinion in Psychiatry 21(4):391-397 (2008) Corporation-induced Diseases, Upstream Epidemiologic Surveillance, and Urban Health Journal of Urban Health 85(4):517-531 (2008)
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