Neighborhood violence
tied to biological stress for kids
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[November 15, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) - Neighborhood factors,
like liquor store density, domestic violence and violent crime rates,
may be tied to biological factors like stress hormone responses for
children, according to a new study in New Orleans.
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Violence is by no means the only source of stress for kids, but it
is an important one, said lead author Katherine P. Theall of Global
Community Health and Behavioral Services at Tulane University School
of Public Health and Tropical Medicine in New Orleans.
“I think we often may overlook the impact of just witnessing
violence or living in communities with higher violence,” Theall told
Reuters Health by email. “Furthermore, it’s important to think about
the connections between community violence (often stemming from
larger structural forces and lack of infrastructure and investment
in some neighborhoods), what that does for violence and other
stressors in the home, and the ultimate impact on those most
vulnerable like children.”
The researchers studied 85 black children, ages five to 16, from 52
neighborhoods of New Orleans with varying densities of businesses
selling alcohol, reports of violent crime and reports of domestic
violence.
The children underwent psychological stress tests specially designed
for youngsters. Primary biological outcomes were telomere length and
cortisol functioning.
In children who lived near more liquor stores, domestic violence and
violent crime, cortisol levels were more likely to remain high and
less likely to return to normal after the stress test.
Telomere length decreased a small but measurable amount for each
additional liquor store in a child’s neighborhood, and for each
report of domestic violence or violent crime within 500 meters
(about 1600 feet) of home, as reported in JAMA Pediatrics, November
14th.
"Results indicate that the effect of adverse neighborhood-level
factors is measurable at the biological level, even in children,"
the authors write.
It is hard to generalize a study of only 85 kids, Theall said. And
biological markers like stress hormones and telomeres are not “hard
end points” like illness or social problems. Still, these markers
may have implications for health risks later, Theall said.
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“I think that at the neighborhood level we must think about the
built and social environments and how they foster violence and
disorder,” she said. “Changing such environments through policy
changes, empowerment or collective efficacy building are some
potential ways.”
Parents and policymakers should be aware that kids are not immune to
their larger neighborhood or even home environment, Theall said.
“Early adverse experiences do get under our skin to influence our
biology,” said Megan R. Gunnar of the University of Minnesota
Institute of Child Development, who was not part of the new study.
“Animal studies where we can experimentally control exposures to
adversity demonstrate that the type of effects observed in this
study are predictive of poor health later in development,” Gunnar
told Reuters Health by email. “It is not rocket science to know that
children need safe places to live in order to grow into healthy and
productive adults.”
“Despite this, many of the children in these neighborhoods will be
resilient,” Gunnar said. “Identifying the protective factors that
support that resilience and building on them, especially for
children showing the effects of toxic exposures, is the appropriate
response to the pediatric health issues revealed by this study.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2gbbkdg
JAMA Pediatrics 2016.
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