
@article{ref1,
title="Neighborhood, family, and child predictors of childhood injury in Canada",
journal="American journal of health behavior",
year="2004",
author="Soubhi, Hassan and Raina, Parminder and Kohen, D.",
volume="28",
number="5",
pages="397-409",
abstract="Objective : To examine independent and combined effects of child, family and neighborhood on medically attended childhood injuries. Methods : Logistic modeling of longitudinal data (n=9796) from the Census Linked National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth. Results : Child age and gender were strong predictors of injuries. Smaller effects were found for parenting, neighborhood cohesion among difficult children less than 2 years old, and neighborhood disadvantage among aggressive children 2-3 years old. Conclusion : Neighborhood in addition to parenting can affect injury risk. Further research is needed into the influence of neighborhood disadvantage and the processes of neighbor's cohesion at different childhood stages.",
language="",
issn="1087-3244",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}