Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Division of Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, and Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
J Urban Health. 2019 Dec;96(6):856-867. doi: 10.1007/s11524-018-0303-1.
Social science and public health literature has framed residential segregation as a potent structural determinant of the higher HIV burden among black heterosexuals, but empirical evidence has been limited. The purpose of this study is to test, for the first time, the association between racial segregation and newly diagnosed heterosexually acquired HIV cases among black adults and adolescents in 95 large US metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) in 2008-2015. We operationalized racial segregation (the main exposure) using Massey and Denton's isolation index for black residents; the outcome was the rate of newly diagnosed HIV cases per 10,000 black adult heterosexuals. We tested the relationship of segregation to this outcome using multilevel multivariate models of longitudinal (2008-2015) MSA-level data, controlling for potential confounders and time. All covariates were lagged by 1 year and centered on baseline values. We preliminarily explored mediation of the focal relationship by inequalities in education, employment, and poverty rates. Segregation was positively associated with the outcome: a one standard deviation decrease in baseline isolation was associated with a 16.2% reduction in the rate of new HIV diagnoses; one standard deviation reduction in isolation over time was associated with 4.6% decrease in the outcome. Exploratory mediation analyses suggest that black/white socioeconomic inequality may mediate the relationship between segregation and HIV. Our study suggests that residential segregation may be a distal determinant of HIV among black heterosexuals. The findings further emphasize the need to address segregation as part of a comprehensive strategy to reduce racial inequities in HIV.
社会科学和公共卫生文献将居住隔离描述为导致黑人异性恋者 HIV 负担较高的一个强有力的结构性决定因素,但实证证据有限。本研究的目的是首次检验种族隔离与 2008-2015 年期间 95 个美国大都市区(MSA)中黑人成年人和青少年新诊断异性恋获得的 HIV 病例之间的关联。我们使用 Massey 和 Denton 的黑人居民隔离指数来操作种族隔离(主要暴露);结果是每 10000 名黑人成年异性恋者中新诊断的 HIV 病例数。我们使用 2008-2015 年 MSA 水平的纵向多变量模型来测试隔离与该结果的关系,控制了潜在的混杂因素和时间。所有协变量滞后 1 年,并以基线值为中心。我们初步探讨了教育、就业和贫困率不平等对焦点关系的中介作用。隔离与结果呈正相关:基线隔离的一个标准差下降与新 HIV 诊断率降低 16.2%相关;隔离随时间的一个标准差下降与结果降低 4.6%相关。探索性中介分析表明,黑/白社会经济不平等可能在隔离与 HIV 之间的关系中起中介作用。我们的研究表明,居住隔离可能是黑人异性恋者中 HIV 的一个远距离决定因素。这些发现进一步强调了需要将隔离作为减少 HIV 方面种族不平等的综合战略的一部分来解决。