reviewAmerican Journal of EpidemiologyAug 26, 2002Closed access

Geocoding and Monitoring of US Socioeconomic Inequalities in Mortality and Cancer Incidence: Does the Choice of Area-based Measure and Geographic Level Matter?: The Public Health Disparities Geocoding Project

Harvard University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Despite the promise of geocoding and use of area-based socioeconomic measures to overcome the paucity of socioeconomic data in US public health surveillance systems, no consensus exists as to which measures should be used or at which level of geography. The authors generated diverse single-variable and composite area-based socioeconomic measures at the census tract, block group, and zip code level for Massachusetts (1990 population: 6,016,425) and Rhode Island (1990 population: 1,003,464) to investigate their associations with mortality rates (1989-1991: 156,366 resident deaths in Massachusetts and 27,291 in Rhode Island) and incidence of primary invasive cancer (1988-1992: 140,610 resident cases in…

Citation impact

1,181
total citations
FWCI
29.32
Percentile
100%
References
66
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Geocoding
  • Socioeconomic status
  • Demography
  • Public health
  • Population
  • Incidence (geometry)
  • Census
  • Geography
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
No related works found for this paper.