De Maio Fernando, Ansell David, Shah Raj C
Department of Sociology and Center for Community Health Equity, DePaul University, Chicago, USA.
Department of Internal Medicine and Center for Community Health Equity, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, USA.
Ethn Health. 2020 Oct;25(7):915-924. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2018.1492706. Epub 2018 Jun 27.
Comparisons of communities are rare in social epidemiology. Our prior work exploring racial/ethnic segregation and the prevalence of low birth weight (LBW) in communities from two large urban cities showed a strong relationship in Chicago and a very weak relationship in Toronto. This study extends that work by examining the association between racial/ethnic minority segregation and LBW in total of 307 communities in five North American cities: Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Toronto. We used Pearson correlation coefficients and OLS regression models to examine potential variability in the association between racial/ethnic minority segregation and LBW, controlling for community-level unemployment. In a combined model with community-level data from all cities, a 10% increase in minority composition is associated with a 0.7% increase in LBW. While racial/ethnic minority segregation and unemployment are not associated with LBW in Toronto, these social determinants have strong and significant associations with LBW across communities in the four US cities in the analysis. Subsequent models revealed opposite effects for percentage non-Hispanic Black and percentage Hispanic. Across communities in the US cities in this analysis, there is considerable similarity in the strength of the effect of racial/ethnic segregation on LBW. Future work should incorporate communities from additional cities, looking to identify community assets and public policies that allow some minority communities to thrive, while other minority communities suffer from a high prevalence of LBW. More work is also needed on the generalizability of these patterns to other health outcomes.
社会流行病学中很少对社区进行比较。我们之前的研究探讨了两个大型城市社区中的种族/族裔隔离与低出生体重(LBW)患病率之间的关系,结果显示在芝加哥两者关系密切,而在多伦多则关系甚微。本研究通过考察北美五个城市(巴尔的摩、波士顿、芝加哥、费城和多伦多)总共307个社区中的种族/族裔少数群体隔离与低出生体重之间的关联,扩展了上述研究。我们使用皮尔逊相关系数和OLS回归模型来检验种族/族裔少数群体隔离与低出生体重之间关联的潜在变异性,并控制社区层面的失业率。在一个整合了所有城市社区层面数据的模型中,少数群体构成增加10%与低出生体重增加0.7%相关。虽然在多伦多,种族/族裔少数群体隔离和失业率与低出生体重无关,但在分析中的美国四个城市,这些社会决定因素与社区层面的低出生体重有强烈且显著的关联。后续模型揭示了非西班牙裔黑人百分比和西班牙裔百分比的相反影响。在本分析中的美国城市社区中,种族/族裔隔离对低出生体重的影响强度有相当大的相似性。未来的研究应纳入更多城市的社区,以确定能使一些少数群体社区繁荣发展,而另一些少数群体社区却低出生体重患病率高的社区资产和公共政策。还需要更多关于这些模式对其他健康结果的可推广性的研究。