Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Center for Gun Violence Solutions, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Inj Prev. 2023 Feb;29(1):85-90. doi: 10.1136/ip-2022-044700. Epub 2022 Aug 31.
Non-fatal shooting rates vary tremendously within cities in the USA. Factors related to structural racism (both historical and contemporary) could help explain differences in non-fatal shooting rates at the neighbourhood level. Most research assessing the relationship between structural racism and firearm violence only includes one dimension of structural racism. Our study uses an intersectional approach to examine how the interaction of two forms of structural racism is associated with spatial non-fatal shooting disparities in Baltimore, Maryland. We present three additive interaction measures to describe the relationship between historical redlining and contemporary racialized economic segregation on neighbourhood-level non-fatal shootings. Our findings revealed that sustained disadvantage census tracts (tracts that experience contemporary socioeconomic disadvantage and were historically redlined) have the highest burden of non-fatal shootings. Sustained disadvantage tracts had on average 24 more non-fatal shootings a year per 10 000 residents compared with similarly populated sustained advantage tracts (tracts that experience contemporary socioeconomic advantage and were not historically redlined). Moreover, we found that between 2015 and 2019, the interaction between redlining and racialized economic segregation explained over one-third of non-fatal shootings (approximately 650 shootings) in sustained disadvantage tracts. These findings suggest that the intersection of historical and contemporary structural racism is a fundamental cause of firearm violence inequities in Baltimore. Intersectionality can advance injury prevention research and practice by (1) serving as an analytical tool to expose inequities in injury-related outcomes and (2) informing the development and implementation of injury prevention interventions and policies that prioritise health equity and racial justice.
美国各城市的非致命枪击率差异极大。与结构种族主义(包括历史上和当代的种族主义)相关的因素可以帮助解释邻里层面非致命枪击率的差异。大多数评估结构种族主义与枪支暴力之间关系的研究只包含结构种族主义的一个维度。我们的研究采用交叉方法来研究两种形式的结构种族主义的相互作用如何与马里兰州巴尔的摩的邻里层面非致命枪击差异相关。我们提出了三种加法交互度量来描述历史上的红线政策和当代种族化经济隔离对邻里层面非致命枪击的关系。我们的研究结果表明,持续处于不利地位的普查区(在当代经历社会经济劣势且历史上被红线政策排斥的普查区)的非致命枪击负担最高。与人口相似的持续优势普查区(在当代经历社会经济优势且历史上未被红线政策排斥的普查区)相比,持续处于不利地位的普查区每年每 10000 名居民平均发生 24 起以上的非致命枪击事件。此外,我们发现,在 2015 年至 2019 年期间,红线政策和种族化经济隔离之间的相互作用解释了持续处于不利地位的普查区中三分之一以上的非致命枪击事件(约 650 起枪击事件)。这些发现表明,历史和当代结构种族主义的交叉是巴尔的摩枪支暴力不平等的根本原因。交叉性可以通过以下两种方式推进伤害预防研究和实践:(1)作为一种分析工具,揭示与伤害相关的结果中的不平等;(2)为伤害预防干预措施和政策的制定和实施提供信息,这些干预措施和政策优先考虑健康公平和种族正义。