Department of Psychology, Chapman University, Orange, CA, United States.
Department of Health Sciences, Chapman University, Orange, CA, United States.
Front Public Health. 2022 Aug 12;10:920637. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.920637. eCollection 2022.
Racial and ethnic health disparities are fundamentally connected to neighborhood quality. For example, as a result of historical systemic inequities, racial and ethnic minorities are more likely to live in neighborhoods with signs of physical disorder (e.g., graffiti, vandalism), and physically disordered environments have been noted to associate with increased risk for chronic illness. Degree of exposure to neighborhood disorder may alter peoples' perception of their neighborhoods, however, with those most exposed (e.g., historically marginalized racial/ethnic groups) perhaps perceiving less threat from signs of neighborhood disorder. The purpose of the present study was to examine the complex interrelationships between people and place by investigating whether exposure to neighborhood physical disorder relates to residents' (1) perceptions of neighborhood safety and (2) perceptions of their health, and (3) examining whether these links vary by race/ethnicity. Using 2016-2018 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) data, a representative sample of US adults aged 51 years and older ( = 9,080, mean age 68 years), we conducted a series of weighted linear regressions to examine the role of neighborhood disorder in relation to both perceived neighborhood safety and self-rated health. Results indicated that greater neighborhood physical disorder was statistically significantly related to feeling less safe among non-Hispanic Whites and Hispanics, but not non-Hispanic Blacks. Regarding self-rated health, neighborhood physical disorder was statistically significantly related to poorer health among all racial/ethnic groups. These findings suggest that, despite differential interpretation of neighborhood disorder as a threat to safety, this modifiable aspect of peoples' environment is related to poor health regardless of one's race/ethnicity.
种族和民族健康差异与社区质量密切相关。例如,由于历史上的系统性不平等,少数民族更有可能生活在存在身体失序迹象(例如涂鸦、破坏公物)的社区中,而身体失序的环境与慢性疾病风险增加有关。接触社区失序的程度可能会改变人们对社区的看法,然而,那些接触最多的人(例如历史上处于边缘地位的种族/族裔群体)可能对社区失序的迹象感到威胁较小。本研究的目的是通过调查接触社区物理失序是否与居民(1)对社区安全的感知和(2)对自身健康的感知相关,以及(3)检查这些联系是否因种族/民族而异,来研究人与地点之间复杂的相互关系。本研究使用了 2016-2018 年健康与退休研究(HRS)的数据,该数据是美国年龄在 51 岁及以上的成年人(n=9080,平均年龄为 68 岁)的代表性样本,我们进行了一系列加权线性回归,以检验邻里失序在感知邻里安全和自我评估健康方面的作用。结果表明,邻里物理失序程度与非西班牙裔白人和西班牙裔人群的安全感下降呈统计学显著相关,但与非西班牙裔黑人无关。关于自我评估健康,邻里物理失序与所有种族/民族群体的健康状况较差呈统计学显著相关。这些发现表明,尽管人们对邻里失序作为安全威胁的解释存在差异,但人们所处环境中这种可改变的方面与健康状况不佳有关,而与种族/民族无关。