Wright R J, Steinbach S F
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Pulmonary and Critical Care Division, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2001 Oct;109(10):1085-9. doi: 10.1289/ehp.011091085.
In the United States, rising trends in asthma prevalence and severity, which disproportionately impact minorities and the urban poor, have not been fully explained by traditional physical environmental risk factors. Exigencies of inner-city living can increase psychosocial risk factors (e.g., stress) that confer increased asthma morbidity. In the United States, chronic exposure to violence is a unique stressor existing in many high-risk urban neighborhoods. In this paper, we describe a series of cases that exemplify a temporal association between exposure to violence and the precipitation of asthma exacerbations in four urban pediatric patients. In the first three cases, the nature of the exposure is characterized by the proximity to violence, which ranged from direct victimization (through either the threat of physical assault or actual assault) to learning of the death of a peer. The fourth case characterizes a scenario in which a child was exposed to severe parental conflict (i.e., domestic violence) in the hospital setting. Increasingly, studies have begun to explore the effect of living in a violent environment, with a chronic pervasive atmosphere of fear and the perceived or real threat of violence, on health outcomes in population-based studies. Violence exposure may contribute to environmental demands that tax both the individual and the communities in which they live to impact the inner-city asthma burden. At the individual level, intervention strategies aimed to reduce violence exposure, to reduce stress, or to counsel victims or witnesses to violence may be complementary to more traditional asthma treatment in these populations. Change in policies that address the social, economic, and political factors that contribute to crime and violence in urban America may have broader impact.
在美国,哮喘患病率和严重程度呈上升趋势,这对少数族裔和城市贫困人口的影响尤为严重,而传统的物理环境风险因素并不能完全解释这一现象。城市内的生活压力会增加心理社会风险因素(如压力),从而导致哮喘发病率上升。在美国,长期暴露于暴力环境是许多高风险城市社区中存在的一种独特压力源。在本文中,我们描述了一系列案例,这些案例体现了四名城市儿科患者暴露于暴力环境与哮喘发作之间的时间关联。在前三个案例中,暴露的性质表现为与暴力事件的接近程度,范围从直接受害(通过身体攻击的威胁或实际攻击)到得知同龄人死亡。第四个案例描述了一名儿童在医院环境中暴露于严重的父母冲突(即家庭暴力)的情景。越来越多的研究开始探讨生活在暴力环境中,长期弥漫着恐惧气氛以及感知到或实际存在的暴力威胁,对基于人群的研究中的健康结果的影响。暴露于暴力环境可能会增加环境压力,这种压力会给个人及其生活的社区带来负担,进而影响城市内的哮喘负担。在个体层面,旨在减少暴力暴露、减轻压力或为暴力受害者或目击者提供咨询的干预策略,可能是对这些人群更传统的哮喘治疗的补充。改变那些解决导致美国城市犯罪和暴力的社会、经济和政治因素的政策,可能会产生更广泛的影响。