The Legacy of Redlining: Increasing Childhood Asthma Disparities through Neighborhood Poverty.

IF 19.3 1区 医学 Q1 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Patrick H Ryan, Antonella Zanobetti, Brent A Coull, Howard Andrews, Leonard B Bacharier, Dakota Bailey, Paloma I Beamer, Jeff Blossom, Cole Brokamp, Soma Datta, Tina Hartert, Gurjit K Khurana Hershey, Daniel J Jackson, Christine C Johnson, Christine Joseph, Jorja Kahn, Nathan Lothrop, Margee Louisias, Heike Luttmann-Gibson, Fernando D Martinez, Eneida A Mendonça, Rachel L Miller, Dennis Ownby, Sima Ramratnam, Christine M Seroogy, Cynthia M Visness, Anne L Wright, Edward M Zoratti, James E Gern, Diane R Gold
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Abstract

Rationale: Identifying the root causes of racial disparities in childhood asthma is critical for health equity. Objectives: To determine whether the racist policy of redlining in the 1930s led to present-day disparities in childhood asthma by increasing community-level poverty and decreasing neighborhood socioeconomic position (SEP). Methods: We categorized census tracts at the birth address of participants from the Children's Respiratory and Environmental Workgroup birth cohort consortium into categories A, B, C, and D as defined by the Home Owners Loan Corporation, with D being the highest perceived risk. Surrogates of present-day neighborhood-level SEP were determined for each tract, including the percentage of low-income households, the CDC's Social Vulnerability Index, and other tract-level variables. We performed causal mediation analysis, which, under the assumption of no unmeasured confounding, estimates the direct and mediated pathways by which redlining may cause asthma disparities through tract-level mediators adjusting for individual-level covariates. Measurements and Main Results: Of 4,849 children, the cumulative incidence of asthma through age 11 was 26.6%, and 13.2% resided in census tracts with a Home Owners Loan Corporation grade of D. In mediation analyses, residing in Grade-D tracts (adjusted odds ratio = 1.03 [95% confidence interval = 1.01, 1.05]) was significantly associated with childhood asthma, with 79% of this increased risk mediated by percentage of low-income households; results were similar for the Social Vulnerability Index and other tract-level variables. Conclusions: The historical structural racist policy of redlining led to present-day asthma disparities in part through decreased neighborhood SEP. Policies aimed at reversing the effects of structural racism should be considered to create more just, equitable, and healthy communities.

红线的遗产:通过邻里贫困加剧儿童哮喘差异。
理由:确定儿童哮喘种族差异的根本原因对于实现健康公平至关重要:确定 20 世纪 30 年代的种族主义红线政策是否通过增加社区贫困和降低邻里社会经济地位(SEP)而导致了当今儿童哮喘的差异:我们将儿童呼吸与环境工作组出生队列联合会参与者出生时所在的人口普查区划分为房屋所有者贷款公司(HOLC)定义的 A、B、C 或 D 类,其中 D 类为最高感知风险。我们为每个区确定了当前社区级 SEP 的代用指标,包括低收入家庭的百分比、疾病预防控制中心的社会脆弱性指数 (SVI) 以及其他区级变量。我们进行了因果中介分析,在没有未测量混杂因素的假设下,通过普查区一级的中介因素来估计红线可能导致哮喘差异的直接和中介途径,并对个人一级的协变量进行调整:在中介分析中,居住在D级人口普查区(aOR = 1.03 [95%CI 1.01,1.05])与儿童哮喘显著相关,其中79%的增加风险由低收入家庭百分比中介;SVI和其他人口普查区变量的结果类似:结论:历史上的结构性种族主义红线政策导致了今天的哮喘差异,部分原因是邻里的 SEP 减少。应考虑采取旨在扭转结构性种族主义影响的政策,以创建更加公正、公平和健康的社区。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
27.30
自引率
4.50%
发文量
1313
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine focuses on human biology and disease, as well as animal studies that contribute to the understanding of pathophysiology and treatment of diseases that affect the respiratory system and critically ill patients. Papers that are solely or predominantly based in cell and molecular biology are published in the companion journal, the American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology. The Journal also seeks to publish clinical trials and outstanding review articles on areas of interest in several forms. The State-of-the-Art review is a treatise usually covering a broad field that brings bench research to the bedside. Shorter reviews are published as Critical Care Perspectives or Pulmonary Perspectives. These are generally focused on a more limited area and advance a concerted opinion about care for a specific process. Concise Clinical Reviews provide an evidence-based synthesis of the literature pertaining to topics of fundamental importance to the practice of pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. Images providing advances or unusual contributions to the field are published as Images in Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep Medicine and the Sciences. A recent trend and future direction of the Journal has been to include debates of a topical nature on issues of importance in pulmonary and critical care medicine and to the membership of the American Thoracic Society. Other recent changes have included encompassing works from the field of critical care medicine and the extension of the editorial governing of journal policy to colleagues outside of the United States of America. The focus and direction of the Journal is to establish an international forum for state-of-the-art respiratory and critical care medicine.
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