Purpose: The Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Cohort has enrolled over 60,000 children to examine how early environmental factors (broadly defined) are associated with key child health outcomes. The ECHO Cohort may be well-positioned to contribute to our understanding of rural environments and contexts, which has implications for rural health disparities research. The present study examined the outcome of child obesity to not only illustrate the suitability of ECHO Cohort data for these purposes but also determine how various definitions of rural and urban populations impact the presentation of findings and their interpretation.

Methods: This analysis uses data from children in the ECHO Cohort study who had residential address information between January 2010 and October 2023, including a subset who also had height and weight data. Several rural-urban classification schemes were examined with and without collapsing into binary rural/urban groupings (ie, the Rural-Urban Continuum Codes, 2010 Rural-Urban Commuting Area [RUCA] Codes, and Urban Influence Codes).

Findings: Various rural/urban definitions and classification schemes produce similar obesity prevalence (17%) when collapsed into binary categories (rural vs urban) and for urban participants in general. When all categories within a classification scheme are examined, however, the rural child obesity prevalence ranges from 5.8% to 24%.

Conclusions: Collapsing rural-urban classification schemes into binary groupings erases nuance and context needed for interpreting findings, ultimately impacting health disparities research. Future work should leverage both individual- and community-level datasets to provide context, and all categories of classification schemes should be used when examining rural populations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12908DOI Listing

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