Apelberg Benjamin J, Buckley Timothy J, White Ronald H
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2005 Jun;113(6):693-9. doi: 10.1289/ehp.7609.
We linked risk estimates from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's National Air Toxics Assessment (NATA) to racial and socioeconomic characteristics of census tracts in Maryland (2000 Census) to evaluate disparities in estimated cancer risk from exposure to air toxics by emission source category. In Maryland, the average estimated cancer risk across census tracts was highest from on-road sources (50% of total risk from nonbackground sources), followed by nonroad (25%), area (23%), and major sources (< 1%). Census tracts in the highest quartile defined by the fraction of African-American residents were three times more likely to be high risk (> 90th percentile of risk) than those in the lowest quartile (95% confidence interval, 2.0-5.0). Conversely, risk decreased as the proportion of whites increased (p < 0.001). Census tracts in the lowest quartile of socioeconomic position, as measured by various indicators, were 10-100 times more likely to be high risk than those in the highest quartile. We observed substantial risk disparities for on-road, area, and nonroad sources by socioeconomic measure and on-road and area sources by race. There was considerably less evidence of risk disparities from major source emissions. We found a statistically significant interaction between race and income, suggesting a stronger relationship between race and risk at lower incomes. This research demonstrates the utility of NATA for assessing regional environmental justice, identifies an environmental justice concern in Maryland, and suggests that on-road sources may be appropriate targets for policies intended to reduce the disproportionate environmental health burden among economically disadvantaged and minority populations.
我们将美国环境保护局国家空气毒物评估(NATA)中的风险估计值与马里兰州人口普查区(2000年人口普查)的种族和社会经济特征相联系,以评估按排放源类别划分的接触空气毒物所致估计癌症风险的差异。在马里兰州,各人口普查区的平均估计癌症风险中,道路源最高(占非背景源总风险的50%),其次是非道路源(25%)、区域源(23%)和主要源(<1%)。以非裔美国居民比例定义的最高四分位数中的人口普查区,其高风险(风险高于第90百分位数)的可能性是最低四分位数中人口普查区的三倍(95%置信区间为2.0 - 5.0)。相反,风险随着白人比例的增加而降低(p < 0.001)。通过各种指标衡量,社会经济地位处于最低四分位数的人口普查区,其高风险的可能性比最高四分位数中的人口普查区高10至100倍。我们观察到,按社会经济指标衡量,道路源、区域源和非道路源存在显著的风险差异;按种族衡量,道路源和区域源也存在显著风险差异。来自主要源排放的风险差异证据则少得多。我们发现种族与收入之间存在统计学上显著的相互作用,这表明在较低收入水平下,种族与风险之间的关系更强。这项研究证明了NATA在评估区域环境正义方面的效用,确定了马里兰州存在的一个环境正义问题,并表明道路源可能是旨在减轻经济弱势群体和少数族裔不成比例的环境健康负担的政策的合适目标。