Department of Human Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Aug;354:117058. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117058. Epub 2024 Jun 24.
A large body of research has been dedicated to understanding the neighborhood conditions that impact health, which outcomes are affected, and how these associations vary by demographic and socioeconomic neighborhood and individual characteristics. This literature has focused mostly on the neighborhoods in which individuals reside, thus failing to recognize that residents across race/ethnicity and class spend a non-trivial amount of their time in neighborhoods far from their residential settings. To address this gap, we use mobile phone data from the company SafeGraph to compare racial inequality in neighborhood socioeconomic advantage exposure across three scales: the neighborhoods that residents live in, their adjacent neighborhoods, and the neighborhoods that they regularly visit. We found that the socioeconomic advantage levels in neighborhood networks differ from the levels at the residential and adjacent scales across all ethnoracial neighborhoods. Furthermore, socioeconomic advantage at the network level is associated with diabetes and hypertension prevalence above and beyond its impact at the residential and adjacent levels. We also find ethnoracial differences in these associations, with greater beneficial consequences of network socioeconomic advantage exposure on hypertension and diabetes for white neighborhoods. Future social determinants of health research needs to reconceptualize exposure to include the larger neighborhood network that a community is embedded in based on where their residents travel to and from.
大量研究致力于了解影响健康的邻里条件、受影响的结果,以及这些关联如何因人口统计学和社会经济的邻里和个体特征而变化。这一文献主要集中在个人居住的邻里,因此未能认识到不同种族/族裔和阶层的居民花费大量时间在远离居住环境的邻里。为了解决这一差距,我们使用 SafeGraph 公司的移动电话数据,从三个层面比较了居民在邻里社会经济优势方面的种族不平等:居民居住的邻里、他们的相邻邻里和他们经常访问的邻里。我们发现,所有民族邻里的邻里网络的社会经济优势水平与居住和相邻层面的水平不同。此外,网络层面的社会经济优势与糖尿病和高血压的发病率有关,其影响超出了居住和相邻层面的影响。我们还发现这些关联存在民族差异,网络社会经济优势对白人社区的高血压和糖尿病的有益影响更大。未来的社会决定健康研究需要重新概念化暴露,包括社区所嵌入的更大的邻里网络,基于居民的出行目的地和来源。