Department of Sociology and Criminology, University of Arkansas-Fayetteville, Fayetteville, AR 72701, USA.
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Arkansas-Little Rock, Little Rock, AR 72204, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Apr 24;17(8):2961. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17082961.
Health is increasingly subject to the complex interplay between the built environment, population composition, and the structured inequity in access to health-related resources across communities. The primary objective of this paper was to examine cardiometabolic disease (diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, stroke) markers and their prevalence across relatively small geographic units in the 500 largest cities in the United States. Using data from the American Community Survey and the 500 Cities Project, the current study examined cardiometabolic diseases across 27,000+ census tracts in the 500 largest cities in the United States. Earlier works clearly show cardiometabolic diseases are not randomly distributed across the geography of the U.S., but rather concentrated primarily in Southern and Eastern regions of the U.S. Our results confirm that chronic disease is correlated with social and built environment factors. Specifically, racial concentration (%, Black), age concentration (% 65+), housing stock age, median home value, structural inequality (Gini index), and weight status (% overweight/obese) were consistent correlates ( < 0.01) of cardiometabolic diseases in the sample of census tracts. The paper examines policy-related features of the built and social environment and how they might play a role in shaping the health and well-being of America's metropolises.
健康越来越受到建筑环境、人口构成以及社区间获取与健康相关资源的结构性不平等之间复杂相互作用的影响。本文的主要目的是研究美国 500 个最大城市中相对较小地理区域的心血管代谢疾病(糖尿病、心血管疾病、中风)标志物及其流行情况。本研究使用美国社区调查和 500 个城市项目的数据,在美国 500 个最大城市的 27000 多个普查区中检查了心血管代谢疾病。早期的研究清楚地表明,心血管代谢疾病在美国的地理分布并非随机,而是主要集中在美国的南部和东部地区。我们的研究结果证实,慢性病与社会和建筑环境因素有关。具体而言,种族集中(%,黑人)、年龄集中(%65+)、住房存量年龄、中位数家庭价值、结构性不平等(基尼指数)和体重状况(%超重/肥胖)与普查区心血管代谢疾病呈一致相关性(<0.01)。本文研究了与建筑和社会环境相关的政策特征,以及它们如何在塑造美国大都市的健康和福祉方面发挥作用。