Department of Planning, Policy, and Design, School of Social Ecology, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-7075, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2013 Apr;103(4):673-8. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2012.300734. Epub 2012 Aug 16.
We assessed the spatial distribution of subsidized housing units provided through 2 federally supported, low-income housing programs in Orange County, California, in relation to neighborhood walkability, transit access, and traffic exposure.
We used data from multiple sources to examine land-use and health-related built environment factors near housing subsidized through the Housing Choice Voucher Program and the Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program, and to determine these patterns' associations with traffic exposure.
Subsidized projects or units in walkable, poorer neighborhoods were associated with lower traffic exposure; higher traffic exposure was associated with more transit service, a Hispanic majority, and mixed-use areas. Voucher units are more likely than LIHTC projects to be located in high-traffic areas.
Housing program design may affect the location of subsidized units, resulting in differential traffic exposure for households by program type. Further research is needed to better understand the relationships among subsidized housing locations, characteristics of the built environment, and health concerns such as traffic exposure, as well as which populations are most affected by these relationships.
我们评估了加利福尼亚州奥兰治县通过两个联邦支持的低收入住房计划提供的补贴住房单元的空间分布情况,这些计划与社区可步行性、交通可达性和交通暴露有关。
我们使用来自多个来源的数据来研究住房补贴计划,包括住房选择凭证计划和低收入住房税收抵免计划(LIHTC)附近的土地利用和与健康相关的建筑环境因素,并确定这些模式与交通暴露的关联。
在步行便利、较贫困的社区中,补贴项目或单位与较低的交通暴露有关;较高的交通暴露与更多的公交服务、以西班牙裔为主和混合用途区域有关。凭证单位比 LIHTC 项目更有可能位于交通繁忙的地区。
住房计划的设计可能会影响补贴单位的位置,从而导致不同类型计划的家庭的交通暴露程度不同。需要进一步研究以更好地了解补贴住房位置、建筑环境特征与交通暴露等健康问题之间的关系,以及哪些人群受到这些关系的影响最大。