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Spatial scale and the geography of tobacco smoking in New Zealand: a multilevel perspective

Spatial scale and the geography of tobacco smoking in New Zealand: a multilevel perspective
Spatial scale and the geography of tobacco smoking in New Zealand: a multilevel perspective
Smoking in New Zealand is more common in deprived areas and in areas with a significant Maori population. Despite its status as a major health problem there has been little work investigating this apparent geography of smoking. Data from the 1996 Census is used to construct a multilevel ‘proportions-as-responses’ model of smoking prevalence. This enables an exploration of the geography of smoking at different spatial scales. Levels within the model distinguish contextual variation between local authorities, census area units and meshblocks. Particular account is taken of the influence of deprivation and ethnicity on smoking. Results confirm the importance of ethnicity and deprivation and indicate that cross-level interaction between meshblock and census area units measures is significant. They also challenge crude stereotypes about the apparent geography of smoking and suggest that, while levels of smoking may be high in parts of North Island, they are less high than might be expected given the socio-demographic composition of the areas concerned. Conversely, smoking is more prevalent than expected in parts of South Island. The paper notes the health policy implications of these emergent geographies.
smoking, ethnicity, multilevel modelling, health geography
0028-8144
6-15
Moon, Graham
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Barnett, Ross
af9d111e-56a1-452f-b250-53efa5afaad4
Moon, Graham
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Barnett, Ross
af9d111e-56a1-452f-b250-53efa5afaad4

Moon, Graham and Barnett, Ross (2003) Spatial scale and the geography of tobacco smoking in New Zealand: a multilevel perspective. New Zealand Geographer, 59 (2), 6-15. (doi:10.1111/j.1745-7939.2003.tb01662.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Smoking in New Zealand is more common in deprived areas and in areas with a significant Maori population. Despite its status as a major health problem there has been little work investigating this apparent geography of smoking. Data from the 1996 Census is used to construct a multilevel ‘proportions-as-responses’ model of smoking prevalence. This enables an exploration of the geography of smoking at different spatial scales. Levels within the model distinguish contextual variation between local authorities, census area units and meshblocks. Particular account is taken of the influence of deprivation and ethnicity on smoking. Results confirm the importance of ethnicity and deprivation and indicate that cross-level interaction between meshblock and census area units measures is significant. They also challenge crude stereotypes about the apparent geography of smoking and suggest that, while levels of smoking may be high in parts of North Island, they are less high than might be expected given the socio-demographic composition of the areas concerned. Conversely, smoking is more prevalent than expected in parts of South Island. The paper notes the health policy implications of these emergent geographies.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Keywords: smoking, ethnicity, multilevel modelling, health geography
Organisations: Economy Culture & Space, PHEW – P (Population Health)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 55390
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/55390
ISSN: 0028-8144
PURE UUID: b49b0f45-23e2-43bd-845b-03104d1b170d
ORCID for Graham Moon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7256-8397

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 31 Jul 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:53

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Contributors

Author: Graham Moon ORCID iD
Author: Ross Barnett

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