A focus on people who move |
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Ewing-2006 |
3667 |
7 |
Adolescents living in sprawling counties more likely to be overweight or at risk of obesity. Changes in BMI not associated with movers. |
Lee-2009 |
3448 |
5 |
Moving to a more or less-sprawling area was not associated with change in BMI. |
Berry-2010 |
572 |
6 |
Participants in lowest SES neighborhoods had largest increases in BMI; moving not significantly associated. |
Stafford-2010 |
8151 |
11 |
Women who resided in neighborhoods with low SES had higher BMI at baseline and greater weight gain over 10 years. No effect in men. |
Ludwig-2011 |
4498 |
13 |
The MTO study. Subjects randomized; opportunity to move from low to high SES neighborhood experienced reductions in the prevalence of obesity and diabetes. |
Hirsch-2014a |
934 |
6 |
Analyzed movers only. Moving to a location with a higher walkability score was associated with a 0.06 lower BMI. |
Powell-Wiley-2015 |
1835 |
7 |
Moving to an area with higher deprivation correlated with weight gain. A longer duration of living in the deprived area associated with increased weight gain. |
Braun- 2016 |
1079 |
6 |
Greater walkability in neighborhoods corresponded with preferable health outcomes like lower blood pressure. Results subject to bias with regard to neighborhood self-selection. |
Lippert 2016 |
12,164 |
15 |
Adolescents who grew up and stayed in low SES neighborhoods had higher risks for obesity compared to individuals stay in moderate-high SES neighborhoods. |
Rachele - 2018 |
928 |
6 |
Changes in the level of neighborhood disadvantage were not associated with BMI changes in women who moved. |
Total # Subjects |
37,276 |
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