Slipping under the radar: worsened health outcomes in semi-urban areas of New Zealand (2020)

View/ Open
Type of Content
Journal ArticleISSN
1175-8716Language
engCollections
Citation
Marek L, Wiki J, Campbell M, Kingham S, Sabel C, Tomintz M, Hobbs M (2020). Slipping under the radar: worsened health outcomes in semi-urban areas of New Zealand. New Zealand Medical Journal. 133(1519). 121-125.This citation is automatically generated and may be unreliable. Use as a guide only.
ANZSRC Fields of Research
42 - Health sciences::4202 - Epidemiology::420210 - Social epidemiology42 - Health sciences::4206 - Public health::420602 - Health equity
44 - Human society::4406 - Human geography::440605 - Health geography
40 - Engineering::4013 - Geomatic engineering::401302 - Geospatial information systems and geospatial data modelling
Rights
All rights reserved unless otherwise statedRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Investigating spatial variation and change (2006–2017) in childhood immunisation coverage in New Zealand
Marek L; Hobbs M; McCarthy J; Wiki J; Tomintz M; Campbell M; Kingham, Simon (Elsevier BV, 2020)Background Immunisation is a safe and effective way of protecting children and adults against harmful diseases. However, immunisation coverage of children is declining in some parts of New Zealand. Aim Use a ... -
Investigating change in the food environment over 10 years in urban New Zealand: A longitudinal and nationwide geospatial study
Mackenbach JD; McLeod GFH; Boden JM; Marek, Lukas; Wiki, Jesse; Hobbs, Matthew (Elsevier BV, 2021)Background: While it is likely that changing food environments have contributed to the rise in obesity rates, very few studies have explored historical trends in the food environment with little, if any, consideration at ... -
National movement patterns during the COVID-19 pandemic in New Zealand: The unexplored role of neighbourhood deprivation
Sabel CE; McCarthy J; Campbell, Malcolm; Marek, Lukas; Wiki, Jesse; Hobbs, Matthew; Kingham, Simon (BMJ, 2021)The COVID-19 pandemic has asked unprecedented questions of governments around the world. Policy responses have disrupted usual patterns of movement in society, locally and globally, with resultant impacts on national ...