Table 2.
Characteristic | Mean (SD) | Range Across Neighborhoods | Item Loadingsb |
---|---|---|---|
Neighborhood disadvantage, % | |||
Families living in poverty | 8 (10) | 0 to 61 | 0.90 |
Households with incomes > state median ($69 010) | 49 (16) | 4 to 88 | 0.86 |
Women with a bachelor’s degree | 15 (8) | 0 to 45 | 0.70 |
Single female head of household | 3 (3) | 0 to 21 | 0.88 |
Mothers of young children who were unemployed | 4 (4) | 0 to 44 | 0.66 |
| |||
Characteristic | α | Mean (SD) | Range |
| |||
Neighborhood disadvantage scorec | .86 | 0 (1) | −2 to 4 |
Neighborhood disadvantage tertiles, No. | |||
Disadvantaged | 221 | ||
Middle | 167 | ||
Advantaged | 238 |
Very low birth weight is defined as a birth weight less than 1500 g.
Item loadings describe the strength of the relationship between the neighborhood characteristic and the construct of neighborhood disadvantage. Values of more than 0.40 suggest a strong relationship. Factor loadings for women’s education and annual family income represent reverse-coded variables.
Neighborhood disadvantage score was created by summing each neighborhood characteristic weighted by its item loading.