TY - JOUR AU - Sen, Bisakha AU - Mennemeyer, Stephen AU - Gary, Lisa C TI - The Relationship Between Neighborhood Quality and Obesity Among Children JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 14985 PY - 2009 Y2 - May 2009 DO - 10.3386/w14985 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w14985 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w14985.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Bisakha Sen Health Care Organization & Policy University of Alabama at Birmingham RPHB 330 R 1530 3rd Avenue S Birmingham, AL 35294-0022 Tel: 205/975-8960 Fax: 205/934-3347 E-Mail: bsen@uab.edu Stephen Mennemeyer Health Care Organization & Policy University of Alabama at Birmingham RPHB 330 1530 3rd Ave S Birmingham, AL 35294-0022 E-Mail: smenneme@uab.edu Lisa Gary Health Care Organization & Policy University of Alabama at Birmingham RPHB 330K 1530 3rd Ave S Birmingham, AL 35294-0022 Tel: 205/975-0506 Fax: 205/934-3347 E-Mail: lgary@uab.edu M1 - published as Bisakha Sen, Stephen Mennemeyer, Lisa C. Gary. "The Relationship between Perceptions of Neighborhood Characteristics and Obesity among Children," in Michael Grossman and Naci H. Mocan, editors, "Economic Aspects of Obesity" University of Chicago Press (2011) M3 - presented at "Economic Aspects of Obesity", November 10-11, 2008 AB - It has long been posited by scientists that we need to have a better understanding in the role that larger contextual factors -- like neighborhood quality and the built environment -- may have on the nation's obesity crisis. This paper explores whether maternal perceptions of neighborhood quality affect children's bodyweight outcomes, and whether racial and ethnic differences in such perceptions may explain any of the hitherto unexplained gap in bodyweight and obesity prevalence among Whites and minorities. The project uses data from the NLSY79 and the CoNLSY datasets. Results indicate that overall neighborhood quality is not significantly related to children's bodyweight. However, one particular characteristic, namely whether or not the mother believes there is enough police protection in the neighborhood, is related. Lack of police protection has robust and significant effects on the BMI-percentile of the children, though it has less robust effects on the risk of becoming obese per se. Finally, there are differences in perceptions about adequate police protection in their neighborhood between Whites and minorities which remain after controlling for other socio-economic characteristics like maternal education, family income and family structure. However, these differences play a minor role in explaining part of the gap in bodyweight between White and minority children. ER -