Open Access
Open access
European Journal of Public Health, volume 30, issue 5, pages 922-928

The impact of life course exposures to neighbourhood deprivation on health and well-being: a review of the long-term neighbourhood effects literature

Stephen Jivraj 1
E. Murray 1
Paul Norman 2
Owen Nicholas 3
1
 
UCL Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care, London, UK
3
 
UCL Department of Statistical Science, London, UK
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2019-10-02
scimago Q1
SJR1.078
CiteScore5.6
Impact factor3.7
ISSN11011262, 1464360X
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Abstract
Background

In this review article, we detail a small but growing literature in the field of health geography that uses longitudinal data to determine a life course component to the neighbourhood effects thesis. For too long, there has been reliance on cross-sectional data to test the hypothesis that where you live has an effect on your health and well-being over and above your individual circumstances.

Methods

We identified 53 articles that demonstrate how neighbourhood deprivation measured at least 15 years prior affects health and well-being later in life using the databases Scopus and Web of Science.

Results

We find a bias towards US studies, the most common being the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. Definition of neighbourhood and operationalization of neighbourhood deprivation across most of the included articles relied on data availability rather than a priori hypothesis.

Conclusions

To further progress neighbourhood effects research, we suggest that more data linkage to longitudinal datasets is required beyond the narrow list identified in this review. The limited literature published to date suggests an accumulation of exposure to neighbourhood deprivation over the life course is damaging to later life health, which indicates improving neighbourhoods as early in life as possible would have the greatest public health improvement.

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