Department of Sociology and Anthropology, BUILDing SCHOLARS, University of Texas at El Paso, 500 W. University Ave., El Paso, TX, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Jul;185:71-80. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.05.042. Epub 2017 May 18.
Studies have demonstrated disparate exposures to carcinogenic hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) in neighborhoods with high densities of Black and Hispanic residents in the US. Asians are the fastest growing racial/ethnic group in the US, yet they have been underemphasized in previous studies of environmental health and injustice. This cross-sectional study investigated possible disparities in residential exposure to carcinogenic HAPs among Asian Americans, including Asian American subgroups in the US (including all 50 states and the District of Columbia, n = 71,208 US census tracts) using National Air Toxics Assessment and US Census data. In an unadjusted analysis, Chinese and Korean Americans experience the highest mean cancer risks from HAPs, followed by Blacks. The aggregated Asian category ranks just below Blacks and above Hispanics, in terms of carcinogenic HAP risk. Multivariate models adjusting for socioeconomic status, population density, urban location, and geographic clustering show that an increase in proportion of Asian residents in census tracts is associated with significantly greater cancer risk from HAPs. Neighborhoods with higher proportions (as opposed to lower proportions) of Chinese, Korean, and South Asian residents have significantly greater cancer risk burdens relative to Whites. Tracts with higher concentrations of Asians speaking a non-English language and Asians that are US-born have significantly greater cancer risk burdens. Asian Americans experience substantial residential exposure to carcinogenic HAPs in US census tracts and in the US more generally.
研究表明,在美国,黑人和西班牙裔居民密度较高的社区中,人们接触致癌性危险空气污染物(HAPs)的情况存在差异。亚洲人是美国增长最快的种族/族裔群体,但在之前的环境健康和不公正问题研究中,他们被低估了。本横断面研究使用国家空气毒物评估和美国人口普查数据,调查了在美国的亚裔美国人(包括美国所有 50 个州和哥伦比亚特区,n=71208 个美国普查区)在住宅接触致癌性 HAPs 方面可能存在的差异。在未经调整的分析中,中国和韩国裔美国人接触 HAPs 导致癌症的风险最高,其次是黑人。在考虑了社会经济地位、人口密度、城市位置和地理集聚因素后,综合的亚洲类别在致癌性 HAP 风险方面的排名低于黑人,高于西班牙裔。多元模型显示,普查区中亚洲居民比例的增加与 HAPs 导致的癌症风险显著增加有关。与白人相比,亚洲居民比例较高(而不是较低)的社区的癌症风险负担显著增加。讲非英语的亚洲人和在美国出生的亚洲人比例较高的地区的癌症风险负担也显著增加。亚裔美国人在美国的普查区和更广泛的美国地区,都面临着大量的住宅接触致癌性 HAPs 的情况。