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      Investigating Neighborhood and Area Effects on Health

      journal-article
      American Public Health Association

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          Abstract

          American Journal of Public Health, 91(11), 1783-1789

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          Most cited references58

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          Bringing context back into epidemiology: variables and fallacies in multilevel analysis.

          A large portion of current epidemiologic research is based on methodologic individualism: the notion that the distribution of health and disease in populations can be explained exclusively in terms of the characteristics of individuals. The present paper discusses the need to include group- or macro-level variables in epidemiologic studies, thus incorporating multiple levels of determination in the study of health outcomes. These types of analyses, which have been called contextual or multi-level analyses, challenge epidemiologists to develop theoretical models of disease causation that extend across levels and explain how group-level and individual-level variables interact in shaping health and disease. They also raise a series of methodological issues, including the need to select the appropriate contextual unit and contextual variables, to correctly specify the individual-level model, and, in some cases, to account for residual correlation between individuals within contexts. Despite its complexities, multilevel analysis holds potential for reemphasizing the role of macro-level variables in shaping health and disease in populations.
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            The fallacy of the ecological fallacy: the potential misuse of a concept and the consequences.

            Ecological studies have been evaluated in epidemiological contexts in terms of the "ecological fallacy." Although the empirical evidence for a lack of comparability between correlations derived from ecological- and individual-level analyses is compelling, the conceptual meaning of the ecological fallacy remains problematic. This paper argues that issues in cross-level inference can be usefully conceptualized as validity problems, problems not peculiar to ecological-level analyses. Such an approach increases the recognition of both potential inference problems in individual-level studies and the unique contributions of ecological variables. This, in turn, expands the terrain for the location of causes for disease and interventions to improve the public's health.
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              Area, Class and Health: Should we be Focusing on Places or People?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Public Health Association
                2001
                November 2001
                15 May 2019
                Article
                10.2105/AJPH.91.11.1783
                1446876
                11684601
                f2194fa7-f11b-4ad6-9d1e-87fd4256e9a3
                History

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