Perera Frederica P, Illman Susan M, Kinney Patrick L, Whyatt Robin M, Kelvin Elizabeth A, Shepard Peggy, Evans David, Fullilove Mindy, Ford Jean, Miller Rachel L, Meyer Ilan H, Rauh Virginia A
Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 60 Haven Avenue, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2002 Feb;110(2):197-204. doi: 10.1289/ehp.02110197.
Rates of developmental and respiratory diseases are disproportionately high in underserved, minority populations such as those in New York City's Washington Heights, Harlem, and the South Bronx. Blacks and Latinos in these neighborhoods represent high risk groups for asthma, adverse birth outcomes, impaired development, and some types of cancer. The Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health in Washington Heights uses molecular epidemiologic methods to study the health effects of urban indoor and outdoor air pollutants on children, prenatally and postnatally, in a cohort of over 500 African-American and Dominican (originally from the Dominican Republic) mothers and newborns. Extensive data are collected to determine exposures to particulate matter < 2.5 microm in aerodynamic diameter (PM(2.5)), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), diesel exhaust particulate (DEP), nitrogen oxide, nonpersistent pesticides, home allergens (dust mite, mouse, cockroach), environmental tobacco smoke (ETS), and lead and other metals. Biomarkers, air sampling, and clinical assessments are used to study the effects of these exposures on children's increased risk for allergic sensitization, asthma and other respiratory disorders, impairment of neurocognitive and behavioral development, and potential cancer risk. The center conducts its research and community education in collaboration with 10 community-based health and environmental advocacy organizations. This unique academic-community partnership helps to guide the center's research so that it is most relevant to the context of the low-income, minority neighborhoods in which the cohort resides, and information is delivered back to these communities in meaningful ways. In turn, communities become better equipped to relay environmental health concerns to policy makers. In this paper we describe the center's research and its academic-community partnership and present some preliminary findings.
在诸如纽约市华盛顿高地、哈莱姆和南布朗克斯等服务欠缺的少数族裔社区,发育疾病和呼吸道疾病的发病率高得不成比例。这些社区的黑人和拉丁裔是哮喘、不良出生结局、发育受损及某些类型癌症的高危群体。华盛顿高地的哥伦比亚儿童环境卫生中心采用分子流行病学方法,对500多名非裔美国人和多米尼加人(原籍多米尼加共和国)母亲及新生儿组成的队列进行研究,以探讨城市室内和室外空气污染物对儿童产前及产后健康的影响。收集了大量数据,以确定对空气动力学直径小于2.5微米的颗粒物(PM2.5)、多环芳烃(PAH)、柴油机排气微粒(DEP)、氮氧化物、非持久性农药、家庭过敏原(尘螨、老鼠、蟑螂)、环境烟草烟雾(ETS)以及铅和其他金属的暴露情况。利用生物标志物、空气采样和临床评估来研究这些暴露对儿童过敏致敏、哮喘及其他呼吸道疾病风险增加、神经认知和行为发育受损以及潜在癌症风险的影响。该中心与10个社区健康与环境倡导组织合作开展研究和社区教育。这种独特的学术 - 社区伙伴关系有助于指导该中心的研究,使其与该队列所居住的低收入少数族裔社区的背景最为相关,并以有意义的方式将信息反馈给这些社区。反过来,社区也更有能力向政策制定者传达环境卫生问题。在本文中,我们描述了该中心的研究及其学术 - 社区伙伴关系,并展示了一些初步研究结果。