Children's Environmental Health Initiative, Rice University, 6100 Main Street, MS-2, Houston, TX 77005, United States.
Yale University, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, 195 Prospect St., New Haven, CT 06511, United States.
Environ Int. 2016 Jul-Aug;92-93:247-55. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2016.04.008. Epub 2016 Apr 23.
Researchers and policymakers are increasingly focused on combined exposures to social and environmental stressors, especially given how often these stressors tend to co-locate. Such exposures are equally relevant in urban and rural areas and may accrue disproportionately to particular communities or specific subpopulations.
To estimate relationships between racial isolation (RI), a measure of the extent to which minority racial/ethnic group members are exposed to only one another, and long-term particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of <2.5μ (PM2.5) and ozone (O3) levels in urban and nonurban areas of the eastern two-thirds of the US.
Long-term (5year average) census tract-level PM2.5 and O3 concentrations were calculated using output from a downscaler model (2002-2006). The downscaler uses a linear regression with additive and multiplicative bias coefficients to relate ambient monitoring data with gridded output from the Community Multi-scale Air Quality (CMAQ) model. A local, spatial measure of RI was calculated at the tract level, and tracts were classified by urbanicity, RI, and geographic region. We examined differences in estimated pollutant exposures by RI, urbanicity, and demographic subgroup (e.g., race/ethnicity, education, socioeconomic status, age), and used linear models to estimate associations between RI and air pollution levels in urban, suburban, and rural tracts.
High RI tracts (≥80th percentile) had higher average PM2.5 levels in each category of urbanicity compared to low RI tracts (<20th percentile), with the exception of the rural West. Patterns in O3 levels by urbanicity and RI differed by region. Linear models indicated that PM2.5 concentrations were significantly and positively associated with RI. The largest association between PM2.5 and RI was observed in the rural Midwest, where a one quintile increase in RI was associated with a 0.90μg/m(3) (95% confidence interval: 0.83, 0.99μg/m(3)) increase in PM2.5 concentration. Associations between O3 and RI in the Northeast, Midwest and West were positive and highest in suburban and rural tracts, even after controlling for potential confounders such as percentage in poverty.
RI is associated with higher 5year estimated PM2.5 concentrations in urban, suburban, and rural census tracts, adding to evidence that segregation is broadly associated with disparate air pollution exposures. Disproportionate burdens to adverse exposures such as air pollution may be a pathway to racial/ethnic disparities in health.
研究人员和政策制定者越来越关注社会和环境压力源的综合暴露,尤其是考虑到这些压力源往往同时存在。这种暴露在城市和农村地区同样存在,而且可能不成比例地发生在特定社区或特定亚人群中。
估计种族隔离(RI)与长期小于 2.5μm(PM2.5)和臭氧(O3)水平之间的关系,RI 是衡量少数种族/族裔群体成员仅与彼此接触的程度的指标,这种关系在美国东部三分之二的城市和非城市地区存在。
使用降尺度模型(2002-2006 年)计算了长期(5 年平均)普查区水平的 PM2.5 和 O3 浓度。降尺度模型使用带有加性和乘性偏差系数的线性回归,将环境监测数据与社区多尺度空气质量(CMAQ)模型的网格化输出相关联。在区一级计算了一个局部的、空间的 RI 度量,根据城市性、RI 和地理位置对区进行分类。我们检查了 RI、城市性和人口统计学亚组(如种族/族裔、教育、社会经济地位、年龄)对估计污染物暴露的影响,并使用线性模型估计 RI 与城市、郊区和农村区的空气污染水平之间的关系。
高 RI 区(≥第 80 百分位数)与低 RI 区(<第 20 百分位数)相比,在每个城市类别中都有更高的平均 PM2.5 水平,除了西部农村地区。按城市性和 RI 划分的 O3 水平模式因地区而异。线性模型表明,PM2.5 浓度与 RI 呈显著正相关。在中西部农村地区,RI 与 PM2.5 之间的最大关联,RI 每增加一个五分位,PM2.5 浓度就会增加 0.90μg/m³(95%置信区间:0.83,0.99μg/m³)。在东北部、中西部和西部,RI 与 O3 之间的关联呈正相关,且在郊区和农村区最高,即使在控制了贫困百分比等潜在混杂因素后也是如此。
RI 与城市、郊区和农村普查区的 5 年估计 PM2.5 浓度较高有关,这进一步证明了隔离与不同的空气污染暴露有关。对空气污染等不利暴露的不成比例负担可能是导致种族/族裔健康差异的途径。