Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York City, NY.
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York City, NY.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2023 Aug;152(2):378-385.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2023.03.018. Epub 2023 Mar 28.
Research suggests demographic, economic, residential, and health-related factors influence vulnerability to environmental exposures. Greater environmental vulnerability may exacerbate environmentally related health outcomes. We developed a neighborhood environmental vulnerability index (NEVI) to operationalize environmental vulnerability on a neighborhood level.
We explored the relationship between NEVI and pediatric asthma emergency department (ED) visits (2014-19) in 3 US metropolitan areas: Los Angeles County, Calif; Fulton County, Ga; and New York City, NY.
We performed separate linear regression analyses examining the association between overall NEVI score and domain-specific NEVI scores (demographic, economic, residential, health status) with pediatric asthma ED visits (per 10,000) across each area.
Linear regression analyses suggest that higher overall and domain-specific NEVI scores were associated with higher annual pediatric asthma ED visits. Adjusted R values suggest that overall NEVI scores explained at least 40% of the variance in pediatric asthma ED visits. Overall NEVI scores explained more of the variance in pediatric asthma ED visits in Fulton County. NEVI scores for the demographic, economic, and health status domains explained more of the variance in pediatric asthma ED visits in each area compared to the NEVI score for the residential domain.
Greater neighborhood environmental vulnerability was associated with greater pediatric asthma ED visits in each area. The relationship differed in effect size and variance explained across the areas. Future studies can use NEVI to identify populations in need of greater resources to mitigate the severity of environmentally related outcomes, such as pediatric asthma.
研究表明,人口、经济、居住和与健康相关的因素会影响对环境暴露的脆弱性。更大的环境脆弱性可能会加剧与环境有关的健康后果。我们开发了一个邻里环境脆弱性指数(NEVI),以便在邻里层面上实现环境脆弱性的操作化。
我们探讨了 NEVI 与美国 3 个大都市地区(加利福尼亚州洛杉矶县、佐治亚州富尔顿县和纽约市)2014-19 年儿科哮喘急诊就诊(per 10000)之间的关系。
我们分别进行了线性回归分析,考察了整体 NEVI 评分和特定领域 NEVI 评分(人口统计学、经济、居住、健康状况)与儿科哮喘急诊就诊(per 10000)之间的关联。
线性回归分析表明,整体和特定领域的 NEVI 评分越高,儿科哮喘急诊就诊的年就诊次数越高。调整后的 R 值表明,整体 NEVI 评分至少解释了儿科哮喘急诊就诊 40%的方差。在富尔顿县,整体 NEVI 评分解释了儿科哮喘急诊就诊更多的方差。与居住领域的 NEVI 评分相比,人口统计学、经济和健康状况领域的 NEVI 评分在每个地区解释了更多的儿科哮喘急诊就诊的方差。
更大的邻里环境脆弱性与每个地区儿科哮喘急诊就诊次数的增加有关。在不同地区,这种关系在效应大小和解释的方差上有所不同。未来的研究可以使用 NEVI 来识别需要更多资源的人群,以减轻与环境有关的后果(如儿科哮喘)的严重程度。