Exposure to Neighborhood Foreclosures and Changes in Cardiometabolic Health: Results From MESA

Home foreclosures can precipitate declines in health among the individuals who lost their homes. Whether home foreclosures can “spillover” to affect the health of other neighborhood residents is largely unknown. Using longitudinal data from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis that were linked to foreclosure data from 2005 to 2012, we assessed whether greater exposure to neighborhood foreclosures was associated with temporal changes in 3 objectively measured cardiometabolic risk factors: body mass index, systolic blood pressure, and fasting glucose level. We used fixed-effects models to estimate mean changes in cardiometabolic risk factors associated with changes in neighborhood foreclosures over time. In models in which we controlled for time-varying income, working status, medication use, neighborhood poverty, neighborhood unemployment, and interactions of age, sex, race, and state foreclosure laws with time, a standard-deviation increase in neighborhood foreclosures (1.9 foreclosures per quarter mile) was associated with increases in fasting glucose (mean = 0.22 mg/dL, 95% confidence interval: −0.05, 0.50) and decreases in blood pressure (mean = −0.27 mm Hg, 95% confidence interval: −0.49, −0.04). Changes in neighborhood foreclosure rates were not associated with changes in body mass index. Overall, greater exposure to neighborhood foreclosures had mixed associations with cardiometabolic risk factors over time. Given the millions of mortgages still in default, further research clarifying the potential health effects of neighborhood foreclosures is needed.

[1]  E. Epel,et al.  Socio‐economic differentials in peripheral biology: Cumulative allostatic load , 2010, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[2]  Subprime Lending Foreclosures, Crime, and Neighborhood Disorganization: Beyond Internal Dynamics , 2012 .

[3]  M. Scharoun-Lee,et al.  Will the Public's Health Fall Victim to the Home Foreclosure Epidemic? , 2009, PLoS medicine.

[4]  Dan Immergluck,et al.  The Impact of Single-family Mortgage Foreclosures on Neighborhood Crime , 2006 .

[5]  Tammy Leonard,et al.  The neighborhood effects of foreclosure , 2009, J. Geogr. Syst..

[6]  Mariana C. Arcaya,et al.  Effects of proximate foreclosed properties on individuals' weight gain in Massachusetts, 1987-2008. , 2013, American journal of public health.

[7]  C. Batson,et al.  Neighborhood Reputation and Resident Sentiment in the Wake of the Las Vegas Foreclosure Crisis , 2014, Sociological perspectives : SP : official publication of the Pacific Sociological Association.

[8]  D. Jeffe,et al.  Neighborhood foreclosures and self-rated health among breast cancer survivors , 2012, Quality of Life Research.

[9]  S. Saegert,et al.  Mortgage Foreclosure and Health Disparities: Serial Displacement as Asset Extraction in African American Populations , 2011, Journal of Urban Health.

[10]  Gary G Bennett,et al.  Safe To Walk? Neighborhood Safety and Physical Activity Among Public Housing Residents , 2007, PLoS medicine.

[11]  John P. Harding,et al.  The Contagion Effect of Foreclosed Properties , 2008 .

[12]  D. Pevalin Housing repossessions, evictions and common mental illness in the UK: results from a household panel study , 2009, Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

[13]  The Impact of Foreclosures on Neighborhood Disorder Before and During the Housing Crisis: Testing the Spiral of Decay , 2012 .

[14]  Francesco Trebbi,et al.  Foreclosures, House Prices, and the Real Economy , 2011 .

[15]  D. Alley,et al.  Mortgage delinquency and changes in access to health resources and depressive symptoms in a nationally representative cohort of Americans older than 50 years. , 2011, American journal of public health.

[16]  Ingrid Gould Ellen,et al.  Do foreclosures cause crime , 2013 .

[17]  J. Iveniuk,et al.  The onset of depression during the great recession: foreclosure and older adult mental health. , 2014, American journal of public health.

[18]  Vicki Been,et al.  Neighborhood Effects of Concentrated Mortgage Foreclosures , 2008 .

[19]  Kevin T. Wolff,et al.  The contemporary foreclosure crisis and US crime rates. , 2012, Social science research.

[20]  Glen P. Kenny,et al.  Physical Activity/Exercise and Type 2 Diabetes , 2006, Diabetes Care.

[21]  Nuala A Sheehan,et al.  Adjusting for treatment effects in studies of quantitative traits: antihypertensive therapy and systolic blood pressure , 2005, Statistics in medicine.

[22]  Dan Immergluck,et al.  The external costs of foreclosure: The impact of single‐family mortgage foreclosures on property values , 2006 .

[23]  R. Platt,et al.  The consequences of foreclosure for depressive symptomatology. , 2012, Annals of epidemiology.

[24]  Jason N. Houle,et al.  The home foreclosure crisis and rising suicide rates, 2005 to 2010. , 2014, American journal of public health.

[25]  Mariana C. Arcaya,et al.  Effects of Proximate Foreclosed Properties on Individuals’ Systolic Blood Pressure in Massachusetts, 1987 to 2008 , 2014, Circulation.

[26]  Seth B Payton,et al.  The spatial extent of the effect of foreclosures on crime. , 2015, Social science research.

[27]  Tracy M. Turner,et al.  Homeownership, wealth accumulation and income status , 2009 .

[28]  J. Dowd,et al.  Neighborhood-level stressors, social support, and diurnal patterns of cortisol: the Chicago Community Adult Health Study. , 2012, Social science & medicine.

[29]  Mark Livingston,et al.  "Safe Going": the influence of crime rates and perceived crime and safety on walking in deprived neighbourhoods. , 2013, Social science & medicine.

[30]  R. Kronmal,et al.  Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis: objectives and design. , 2002, American journal of epidemiology.

[31]  P. Allison Fixed Effects Regression Models , 2009 .