Guan Alice, Shariff-Marco Salma, Henry Kevin A, Lin Katherine, Meltzer Dan, Canchola Alison J, Arizpe Angel, Rathod Aniruddha B, Hughes Amy E, Kroenke Candyce H, Gomez Scarlett L, Hiatt Robert A, Stroup Antoinette M, Pinheiro Paulo S, Boscoe Francis, Zhu Hong, Pruitt Sandi L
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Greater Bay Area Cancer Registry, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2025 Mar;40(4):739-748. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-08974-6. Epub 2024 Sep 16.
Hispanic or Latino populations (hereafter, "Latinos") are a rapidly expanding U.S. demographic and have documented inequities in preventable diseases and conditions. Many Latinos reside in ethnic enclaves, and understanding the context and healthcare accessibility within these places is critical.
This study described the neighborhood social and built environment attributes of Latino enclaves and evaluated associations between enclaves and geographic healthcare accessibility.
Cross-sectional ecologic analysis.
Our unit of analysis was all neighborhoods (n ~ 20,000 census tracts) in California, Florida, New Jersey, New York, and Texas in years 2000 and 2010.
The primary exposure of interest, "Latino enclaves," was defined using neighborhood-level data on the percentage of Latino residents, foreign-born Latinos, Spanish speakers with limited English proficiency, and linguistically isolated Spanish-speaking households. The primary outcome was a neighborhood-level measure of geographic healthcare accessibility of primary care physicians, which accounted for both the supply of physicians and population demand for healthcare (i.e., population size within driving distance).
Approximately 30% of neighborhoods were classified as Latino enclaves, 87% of which were enclaves in both 2000 and 2010. Compared with non-enclaves, Latino enclaves had more markers of structural disadvantage including having higher proportions of poverty, uninsured individuals, crowded housing, and higher crime scores. Results from multivariable models suggest that more culturally distinct neighborhoods (i.e., higher enclave score) had lower healthcare accessibility, though when stratified, this association persisted only in high (≥ 20%) poverty neighborhoods.
This study highlights several neighborhood structural disadvantages within Latino enclaves, including higher poverty, uninsured individuals, and crime compared to non-enclave neighborhoods. Moreover, our findings point to the need for interventions aimed at improving healthcare accessibility particularly within socioeconomically disadvantaged Latino enclaves. Addressing these inequities demands multifaceted approaches that consider both social and structural factors to ensure equitable healthcare access for Latino populations.
西班牙裔或拉丁裔人口(以下简称“拉丁裔”)是美国一个迅速扩大的人口群体,且在可预防疾病和健康状况方面存在已被记录的不平等现象。许多拉丁裔居住在种族聚居区,了解这些地方的环境和医疗可及性至关重要。
本研究描述了拉丁裔聚居区的邻里社会和建筑环境特征,并评估了聚居区与地理医疗可及性之间的关联。
横断面生态分析。
我们的分析单位是2000年和2010年加利福尼亚州、佛罗里达州、新泽西州、纽约州和得克萨斯州的所有社区(约20000个人口普查区)。
主要关注的暴露因素“拉丁裔聚居区”,是根据邻里层面关于拉丁裔居民百分比、外国出生的拉丁裔、英语水平有限的西班牙语使用者以及语言孤立的讲西班牙语家庭的数据来定义的。主要结果是对初级保健医生地理医疗可及性的邻里层面测量指标,该指标同时考虑了医生供应和人口对医疗保健的需求(即驾车距离内的人口规模)。
约30%的社区被归类为拉丁裔聚居区,其中87%在2000年和2010年都是聚居区。与非聚居区相比,拉丁裔聚居区有更多结构劣势的标志,包括贫困、未参保个体、拥挤住房的比例更高以及犯罪得分更高。多变量模型的结果表明,文化差异更大的社区(即聚居区得分更高)医疗可及性更低,不过分层分析时,这种关联仅在高贫困率(≥20%)的社区中持续存在。
本研究突出了拉丁裔聚居区内的几个邻里结构劣势,包括与非聚居区社区相比更高的贫困率、未参保个体和犯罪率。此外,我们的研究结果表明需要采取干预措施来改善医疗可及性,特别是在社会经济处于劣势的拉丁裔聚居区内。解决这些不平等问题需要多方面的方法,既要考虑社会因素也要考虑结构因素,以确保拉丁裔人口能公平获得医疗服务。