Polednak A P
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510.
Am J Public Health. 1991 Nov;81(11):1480-2. doi: 10.2105/ajph.81.11.1480.
The Black-White difference in infant mortality rates for 1982 through 1986 in 38 large US standard metropolitan statistical areas (SMSAs) varied by a factor of almost seven. In multiple regression analyses the most important predictor of the Black-White difference in the 38 SMSAs was an index of Black-White residential dissimilarity (or "segregation index"), independent of Black-White differences in median family income and poverty prevalence. Certain SMSAs in California had relatively low segregation indexes and small Black-White differences in infant mortality, despite considerable Black-White differences in poverty prevalence. The explanations for the apparent effect of residential segregation should be explored.
1982年至1986年期间,美国38个大型标准都市统计区(SMSAs)的婴儿死亡率的黑白差异相差近7倍。在多元回归分析中,38个SMSAs中黑白差异的最重要预测因素是黑白居住差异指数(或“隔离指数”),与家庭收入中位数和贫困率的黑白差异无关。加利福尼亚州的某些SMSAs的隔离指数相对较低,婴儿死亡率的黑白差异较小,尽管贫困率存在相当大的黑白差异。应探究居住隔离产生明显影响的原因。