Jaquelyn L. Jahn is with The Ubuntu Center on Racism, Global Movements, and Population Health Equity at Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA. Maeve Wallace and Katherine P. Theall are with the Department of Social, Behavioral, and Population Science and the Mary Amelia Center for Women's Health Equity Research at the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, LA. Rachel R. Hardeman is with the Division of Health Policy and Management, the Center for Antiracism Research for Health Equity at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health, as well as the Minnesota Population Center, Minneapolis.
Am J Public Health. 2023 Jan;113(S1):S21-S28. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2022.307079.
To measure neighborhood exposure to proactive policing as a manifestation of structural racism and its association with preterm birth. We linked all birth records in New Orleans, Louisiana (n = 9102), with annual census tract rates of proactive police stops using data from the New Orleans Police Department (2018-2019). We fit multilevel Poisson models predicting preterm birth across quintiles of stop rates, controlling for several individual- and tract-level covariates. Nearly 20% of Black versus 8% of White birthing people lived in neighborhoods with the highest rates of proactive police stops. Fully adjusted models among Black birthing people suggest the prevalence of preterm birth in the neighborhoods with the highest proactive policing rates was 1.41 times that of neighborhoods with the lowest rates (95% confidence interval = 1.04, 1.93), but associations among White birthing people were not statistically significant. Taken together with previous research, high rates of proactive policing likely contribute to Black‒White inequities in reproductive health. Proactive policing is widely implemented to deter violence, but alternative strategies without police should be considered to prevent potential adverse health consequences. (. 2023;113(S1):S21-S28. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.307079).
衡量社区接触主动警务的情况,将其作为结构性种族主义的表现,并研究其与早产的关联。我们将路易斯安那州新奥尔良市的所有分娩记录(n=9102)与新奥尔良警察局(2018-2019 年)提供的年度普查区主动警察拦截率数据相关联。我们拟合了多水平泊松模型,预测了停站率五分位数的早产率,同时控制了几个个体和区层面的协变量。黑人产妇中有近 20%的人居住在主动警察拦截率最高的社区,而白人产妇中只有 8%的人居住在这些社区。在黑人产妇中,经过充分调整的模型表明,在主动警务率最高的社区中,早产的流行率是主动警务率最低的社区的 1.41 倍(95%置信区间为 1.04,1.93),但白人产妇中的关联没有统计学意义。综合以往的研究,高比例的主动警务很可能导致生殖健康方面的黑人和白人之间的不平等。主动警务被广泛用于威慑暴力,但应该考虑采取没有警察参与的替代策略,以防止潜在的不良健康后果。(2023 年;113(S1):S21-S28。https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.307079)。