White Emily B, Ekenga Christine C
Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Cancer. 2024 Nov 1;130(21):3699-3707. doi: 10.1002/cncr.35467. Epub 2024 Aug 26.
Traffic-related air pollutants have been associated with a variety of adverse human health impacts, including cancers. In the United States, numerous studies have documented racial inequities in neighborhood exposures to traffic-related air pollution. Emerging evidence suggests that structural racism may influence neighborhood exposures to air pollutants. However, existing research has largely focused on residential racial segregation, one indicator of structural racism. This study developed a multidimensional measure of structural racism to examine the relationship between structural racism and estimated cancer risk from air pollutants in Georgia.
Carcinogenic air toxics data were obtained from the US Environmental Protection Agency's 2019 Air Toxics Screening Assessment and sociodemographic data from the American Community Survey. Guided by stakeholder input, county-level data on residential segregation, education, employment, incarceration, economic status, political participation, and homeownership were used to create a multidimensional county-level structural racism index. Relative risks (RRs) were estimated for associations between structural racism and elevated (top 10% in Georgia) estimated cancer risk from air toxics.
Multilevel analyses revealed a significant association between multidimensional structural racism and exposure to carcinogenic traffic-related air pollutants. Neighborhoods in the highest quartile of structural racism exhibited an elevated cancer risk from traffic-related air pollutants (RR, 7.84; 95% CI, 5.11-12.05) compared to neighborhoods with lower levels of structural racism.
Multidimensional structural racism was associated with estimated cancer risk from traffic-related air pollution in Georgia. Findings can inform future studies and policy interventions that address racial inequalities in exposure to traffic-related air pollution.
与交通相关的空气污染物已被证明会对人类健康产生多种不利影响,包括引发癌症。在美国,大量研究记录了不同种族在社区接触与交通相关空气污染方面存在的不平等现象。新出现的证据表明,结构性种族主义可能会影响社区对空气污染物的接触情况。然而,现有研究主要集中在居住种族隔离这一结构性种族主义指标上。本研究开发了一种结构性种族主义的多维衡量方法,以检验佐治亚州结构性种族主义与空气污染物所致估计癌症风险之间的关系。
致癌空气有毒物质数据来自美国环境保护局2019年的空气有毒物质筛查评估,社会人口统计学数据来自美国社区调查。在利益相关者意见的指导下,利用县级层面关于居住隔离、教育、就业、监禁、经济状况、政治参与和住房拥有情况的数据,创建了一个县级结构性种族主义多维指数。估计了结构性种族主义与空气有毒物质所致升高的(佐治亚州前10%)估计癌症风险之间关联的相对风险(RRs)。
多层次分析显示,多维结构性种族主义与接触致癌性交通相关空气污染物之间存在显著关联。与结构性种族主义程度较低的社区相比,结构性种族主义处于最高四分位数的社区因交通相关空气污染物而面临的癌症风险更高(RR,7.84;95%CI,5.11 - 12.05)。
多维结构性种族主义与佐治亚州交通相关空气污染所致估计癌症风险相关。研究结果可为未来研究及解决交通相关空气污染暴露方面种族不平等问题的政策干预提供参考。