UCSF Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, 490 Illinois St, 7th Floor, San Francisco, CA, 94158, United States.
UCSF Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, 490 Illinois St, 7th Floor, San Francisco, CA, 94158, United States.
Health Place. 2022 Sep;77:102904. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2022.102904. Epub 2022 Sep 2.
Residential racial segregation is a key manifestation of anti-Black structural racism, thought to be a fundamental cause of poor health; evidence has shown that it yields neighborhood disinvestment, institutional discrimination, and targeting of unhealthy products like tobacco and alcohol. Yet research on the long-term impacts of childhood exposure to residential racial segregation is limited. Here, we analyzed data on 1823 Black participants in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, estimating associations between childhood segregation trajectories and young adult health. Black young adults who consistently lived in high-segregation neighborhoods throughout childhood experienced unhealthier smoking and drinking behaviors and higher odds of obesity compared to other trajectory groups, including children who moved into or out of high-segregation neighborhoods. Results were robust to controls for neighborhood and family poverty. Findings underscore that for Black children who grow up in segregated neighborhoods, the roots of structurally-determined health inequities are established early in life.
居住种族隔离是反黑人结构种族主义的一个重要表现形式,被认为是健康状况不佳的一个根本原因;有证据表明,它导致了社区投资不足、制度歧视以及烟草和酒精等不健康产品的定位。然而,关于儿童期接触居住种族隔离的长期影响的研究有限。在这里,我们分析了收入动态面板研究中 1823 名黑人参与者的数据,估计了童年时期种族隔离轨迹与青年期健康之间的关联。与其他轨迹组(包括搬入或搬出高隔离社区的儿童)相比,整个童年时期一直生活在高隔离社区的黑人年轻人吸烟和饮酒行为更不健康,肥胖的可能性也更高。结果在控制了社区和家庭贫困因素后仍然成立。这些发现强调,对于在隔离社区中长大的黑人儿童来说,结构决定的健康不平等的根源早在生命早期就已经确立。