Showing 1 through 1 of 1 records. | | Pages: 20 pages | || | Words: 6667 words | || | |
| 1. Grineski, Sara., Kronenfeld, Jennie. and Bolin, Bob. "In The Face of Uncertainty: Community Health, Environmental Hazards and Statistical Significance" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta Hilton Hotel, Atlanta, GA, Aug 16, 2003 Online <.PDF>. 2009-12-05 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p107866_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Review Method: Peer Reviewed Abstract: Studying relationships between health and environmental toxins usually involves statistical tests and a reliance on 95 percent- significance. But because of inherent scientific uncertainties, small sample sizes, unknown exposure levels, and scientific value judgments, some researchers working with contaminated communities propose the adoption of health-protective significance levels, (e.g., 75 percent-). To explore alternative significance levels, health data collected in a poor Latino neighborhood surrounded by industrial facilities in Phoenix, AZ is utilized to analyze three sets of correlations. First, the negative correlation between health problems and distance from a specific point source polluter was significant at 93 percent- for children. Interestingly, the relationship was less significant and positive for adults. Second, while a respondent's self-reported health status was correlated negatively at 87 percent- with length of residence in the neighborhood, a parallel relationship was not found for breathing problems. Third, the relationship between presence of cockroaches in the home and breathing problems was significant at 95 percent- for adults and children. Overall, this analysis illustrates the complexity and confusion surrounding community-level environmental health research. Contradictory explanations can be provided for both the traditionally "significant" and "insignificant" findings. So while alternative health-protective significance levels may be helpful to policy makers and contaminated communities, they become more powerful when paired with other forms of inquiry. Researchers should report data frequencies, use multi-method approaches, involve community residents, balance research goals with scientific rigor, and encourage communities to focus on political, rather than purely scientific, solutions to their environmental concerns. |
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