Ard Kerry
Environmental Sociology, The Ohio State University, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2015 Sep;53:375-90. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.06.019. Epub 2015 Jun 27.
In recent decades there have been dramatic declines in industrial air toxins. However, there has yet to be a national study investigating if the drop has mitigated the unequal exposure to industrial toxins by race and social class. This paper addresses this by developing a unique dataset of air pollution exposure estimates, by aggregating the annual fall-out location of 415 air toxins, from 17,604 facilities, for the years 1995 to 2004 up to census block groups (N=216,159/year). These annual estimates of exposure were matched with census data to calculate trends in exposure for different racial and socioeconomic groups. Results show that exposure to air toxins has decreased for everyone, but African-Americans are consistently more exposed than Whites and Hispanics and socioeconomic status is not as protective for African-Americans. These results by race were further explored using spatially specified multilevel models which examine trends over time and across institutional boundaries.
近几十年来,工业空气毒素大幅下降。然而,尚未有全国性研究调查这种下降是否减轻了种族和社会阶层在工业毒素暴露方面的不平等。本文通过开发一个独特的空气污染暴露估计数据集来解决这一问题,该数据集汇总了1995年至2004年期间17604个设施中415种空气毒素的年度沉降位置,直至人口普查街区组(每年N = 216159)。这些年度暴露估计值与人口普查数据相匹配,以计算不同种族和社会经济群体的暴露趋势。结果表明,每个人接触空气毒素的情况都有所下降,但非裔美国人始终比白人和西班牙裔更容易接触到,而且社会经济地位对非裔美国人的保护作用并不明显。通过使用空间特定的多层次模型进一步探讨了这些按种族划分的结果,该模型研究了随时间和跨机构边界的趋势。