Shmool Jessie L C, Kubzansky Laura D, Newman Ogonnaya Dotson, Spengler John, Shepard Peggy, Clougherty Jane E
Department of Environmental & Occupational Health, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, 100 Technology Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15219, USA.
Environ Health. 2014 Nov 6;13:91. doi: 10.1186/1476-069X-13-91.
Recent toxicological and epidemiological evidence suggests that chronic psychosocial stress may modify pollution effects on health. Thus, there is increasing interest in refined methods for assessing and incorporating non-chemical exposures, including social stressors, into environmental health research, towards identifying whether and how psychosocial stress interacts with chemical exposures to influence health and health disparities. We present a flexible, GIS-based approach for examining spatial patterns within and among a range of social stressors, and their spatial relationships with air pollution, across New York City, towards understanding their combined effects on health.
We identified a wide suite of administrative indicators of community-level social stressors (2008-2010), and applied simultaneous autoregressive models and factor analysis to characterize spatial correlations among social stressors, and between social stressors and air pollutants, using New York City Community Air Survey (NYCCAS) data (2008-2009). Finally, we provide an exploratory ecologic analysis evaluating possible modification of the relationship between nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and childhood asthma Emergency Department (ED) visit rates by social stressors, to demonstrate how the methods used to assess stressor exposure (and/or consequent psychosocial stress) may alter model results.
Administrative indicators of a range of social stressors (e.g., high crime rate, residential crowding rate) were not consistently correlated (rho = - 0.44 to 0.89), nor were they consistently correlated with indicators of socioeconomic position (rho = - 0.54 to 0.89). Factor analysis using 26 stressor indicators suggested geographically distinct patterns of social stressors, characterized by three factors: violent crime and physical disorder, crowding and poor access to resources, and noise disruption and property crimes. In an exploratory ecologic analysis, these factors were differentially associated with area-average NO2 and childhood asthma ED visits. For example, only the 'violent crime and disorder' factor was significantly associated with asthma ED visits, and only the 'crowding and resource access' factor modified the association between area-level NO2 and asthma ED visits.
This spatial approach enabled quantification of complex spatial patterning and confounding between chemical and non-chemical exposures, and can inform study design for epidemiological studies of separate and combined effects of multiple urban exposures.
近期的毒理学和流行病学证据表明,慢性心理社会压力可能会改变污染对健康的影响。因此,人们越来越关注用于评估和将包括社会压力源在内的非化学暴露纳入环境卫生研究的精细方法,以确定心理社会压力是否以及如何与化学暴露相互作用来影响健康和健康差异。我们提出了一种灵活的、基于地理信息系统(GIS)的方法,用于研究纽约市一系列社会压力源内部和之间的空间模式,以及它们与空气污染的空间关系,以了解它们对健康的综合影响。
我们确定了一系列社区层面社会压力源的行政指标(2008 - 2010年),并应用同步自回归模型和因子分析来描述社会压力源之间以及社会压力源与空气污染物之间的空间相关性,使用纽约市社区空气调查(NYCCAS)数据(2008 - 2009年)。最后,我们进行了一项探索性生态分析,评估社会压力源对二氧化氮(NO₂)与儿童哮喘急诊室(ED)就诊率之间关系的可能修正作用,以证明用于评估压力源暴露(和/或随之而来的心理社会压力)的方法如何可能改变模型结果。
一系列社会压力源的行政指标(如高犯罪率、居住拥挤率)并非始终具有相关性(rho = -0.44至0.89),它们与社会经济地位指标也并非始终相关(rho = -0.54至0.89)。使用26个压力源指标的因子分析表明,社会压力源存在地理上不同的模式,其特征由三个因素组成:暴力犯罪和身体失序、拥挤和资源获取困难,以及噪音干扰和财产犯罪。在一项探索性生态分析中,这些因素与区域平均NO₂和儿童哮喘急诊室就诊存在不同程度的关联。例如,只有“暴力犯罪和失序”因素与哮喘急诊室就诊显著相关,只有“拥挤和资源获取”因素改变了区域层面NO₂与哮喘急诊室就诊之间的关联。
这种空间方法能够量化化学和非化学暴露之间复杂的空间模式和混杂情况,并可为关于多种城市暴露的单独和综合影响的流行病学研究设计提供参考。