Department of Health, Behavior & Society, University of Kentucky College of Public Health, Lexington, Kentucky.
University of Kentucky College of Public Health, Department of Health, Behavior & Society, 151 Washington Ave, Lexington, KY 40536. Email:
Prev Chronic Dis. 2021 Feb 18;18:E14. doi: 10.5888/pcd18.200483.
Few studies have examined the effects of racial segregation on colorectal cancer (CRC) outcomes, and none has determined whether rurality moderates the effect of racial segregation on CRC mortality. We examined whether the effect of segregation on CRC mortality varied by rurality in the Mississippi Delta Region, an economically distressed and historically segregated region of the United States.
We used data from the US Census Bureau and the 1999-2018 Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program to estimate mixed linear regression models in which CRC mortality rates among Black and White residents in Delta Region counties (N = 252) were stratified by rurality and regressed on White-Black residential segregation indices and 4 socioeconomic control variables.
Among Black residents, CRC mortality rates in urban counties were a function of a squared segregation term (b = 162.78, P = .01), indicating that the relationship between segregation and CRC mortality was U-shaped. Among White residents, main effects of annual household income (b = 29.01, P = .04) and educational attainment (b = 34.58, P = .03) were associated with CRC mortality rates in urban counties, whereas only annual household income (b = 19.44, P = .04) was associated with CRC mortality rates in rural counties. Racial segregation was not associated with CRC mortality rates among White residents.
Our county-level analysis suggests that health outcomes related to racial segregation vary by racial, contextual, and community factors. Segregated rural Black communities may feature stronger social bonds among residents than urban communities, thus increasing interpersonal support for cancer prevention and control. Future research should explore the effect of individual-level factors on colorectal cancer mortality.
很少有研究探讨种族隔离对结直肠癌(CRC)结局的影响,也没有研究确定农村地区是否会调节种族隔离对 CRC 死亡率的影响。我们研究了在密西西比三角洲地区,种族隔离对 CRC 死亡率的影响是否因农村地区而异,该地区是美国经济贫困且历史上存在种族隔离的地区。
我们使用了美国人口普查局和 1999-2018 年监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)计划的数据,以估计混合线性回归模型,其中按农村地区划分的密西西比三角洲地区黑人和白人居民的 CRC 死亡率(N = 252)与白人与黑人居住隔离指数和 4 个社会经济控制变量相关。
在黑人居民中,城市县的 CRC 死亡率是隔离平方项的函数(b = 162.78,P =.01),表明隔离与 CRC 死亡率之间的关系呈 U 形。在白人居民中,年度家庭收入(b = 29.01,P =.04)和教育程度(b = 34.58,P =.03)的主要效应与城市县的 CRC 死亡率相关,而只有年度家庭收入(b = 19.44,P =.04)与农村县的 CRC 死亡率相关。种族隔离与白人居民的 CRC 死亡率无关。
我们的县级分析表明,与种族隔离相关的健康结果因种族、背景和社区因素而异。隔离的农村黑人社区的居民之间可能具有更强的社会联系,从而增加了人际间对癌症预防和控制的支持。未来的研究应该探讨个体因素对结直肠癌死亡率的影响。