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Residing in a low-income-low-food-access neighbourhood and asthma in early and middle childhood in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program: a multisite cohort study

Title: Residing in a low-income-low-food-access neighbourhood and asthma in early and middle childhood in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program: a multisite cohort study
Authors: Wang, Veronica A; Habre, Rima; Ryan, Patrick H; Datta, Soma; Luttmann-Gibson, Heike; Blossom, Jeff; Aris, Izzuddin M; Chandran, Aruna; Kress, Amii M; Gilliland, Frank; Breton, Carrie; Farzan, Shohreh F; Camargo, Carlos A; Liang, Donghai; Kerver, Jean M; Karr, Catherine J; Leve, Leslie D; Dabelea, Dana; Karagas, Margaret R; Bennett, Deborah H; Nkoy, Flory L; Aschner, Judy; O’Shea, T Michael; McEvoy, Cindy T; Knapp, Emily A; Schuh, Holly B; Miller, Rachel L; Gold, Diane R; Zanobetti, Antonella
Contributors: NIH Office of the Director; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Source: BMJ Open ; volume 15, issue 6, page e094317 ; ISSN 2044-6055 2044-6055
Publisher Information: BMJ
Publication Year: 2025
Description: Importance Access to healthy and affordable foods may play a role in reducing inflammation and in healthy pulmonary immune system development. Objective To investigate the association between residing in a low-income and low-food-access (LILA) neighbourhood and risk of childhood asthma. A positive association was hypothesised. Design, setting and participants This prospective cohort study consists of 16 012 children from 35 longitudinal studies in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes programme (children born 1998–2021) from across the contiguous USA. We conducted survival analyses adjusted for child sex, race/ethnicity, maternal education, gestational smoking, and parental history of asthma. Exposure(s) Several commonly used geospatial food access metrics were linked to residential locations including: LILA census tracts where the nearest supermarket is >1 mile in urban and >10 miles in rural areas (LILA 1 and 10 ), >1 mile in urban and >20 miles in rural areas (LILA 1 and 20 ), >0.5 mile in urban and >10 miles in rural areas (LILA 0.5 and 10 ), and >0.5 mile without a vehicle or >20 miles (LILA vehicle ). Each metric was linked to lifetime residential history timelines then dichotomised according to whether the child had spent at least 75% of their life living in a LILA area separately for birth through age 5 years (cumulative early childhood) and birth through age 11 years (cumulative middle childhood). Main outcomes(s) and measure(s) Asthma incidence in cumulative early and middle childhood. Results Residing in a LILA 0.5 and 10 and LILA vehicle neighbourhood was associated with a higher asthma incidence in cumulative early and middle childhood. The LILA 0.5 and 10 and LILA vehicle associations were stronger for asthma during cumulative early childhood, where we observed hazard ratios of 1.13 (95% CI 1.02 to 1.24) and 1.13 (95% CI 1.01 to 1.27), respectively. The associations were higher among children who were Hispanic, were female and had lower maternal education. ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-094317
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-094317; https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-094317
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.6EBBCBA9
Database: BASE