Health selection into neighborhoods among patients enrolled in a clinical trial
Author(s)
Coleman, Ruth L.; Razak, Fahad; Holman, Rury R.; Arcaya, Mariana Clair; Alvarez, Mariajose
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Health selection into neighborhoods may contribute to geographic health disparities. We demonstrate the potential for clinical trial data to help clarify the causal role of health on locational attainment. We used data from the 20-year United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) to explore whether random assignment to intensive blood-glucose control therapy, which improved long-term health outcomes after median 10 years follow-up, subsequently affected what neighborhoods patients lived in. We extracted postcode-level deprivation indices for the 2710 surviving participants of UKPDS living in England at study end in 1996/1997. We observed small neighborhood advantages in the intensive versus conventional therapy group, although these differences were not statistically significant. This analysis failed to show conclusive evidence of health selection into neighborhoods, but data suggest the hypothesis may be worthy of exploration in other clinical trials or in a meta-analysis. Keywords:
Neighborhoods, Self-selection, Health, Equity, Socioeconomic status
Date issued
2017-12Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and PlanningJournal
Preventive Medicine Reports
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Arcaya, Mariana C., Ruth L. Coleman, Fahad Razak, Maria L. Alva, and Rury R. Holman. “Health Selection into Neighborhoods Among Patients Enrolled in a Clinical Trial.” Preventive Medicine Reports 8 (December 2017): 51–54. © 2017 The Authors
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2211-3355