Zewdie Hiwot Y, Fahey Carolyn A, Harrington Anna L, Hart Jaime E, Biggs Mary L, McClure Leslie A, Whitsel Eric A, Kaufman Joel D, Hajat Anjum
Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, Washington.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Environ Epidemiol. 2025 Jan 20;9(1):e367. doi: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000367. eCollection 2025 Feb.
We examined if racial residential segregation (RRS) - a fundamental cause of disease - is independently associated with air pollution after accounting for other neighborhood and individual-level sociodemographic factors, to better understand its potential role as a confounder of air pollution-health studies.
We compiled data from eight large cohorts, restricting to non-Hispanic Black and White urban-residing participants observed at least once between 1999 and 2005. We used 2000 decennial census data to derive a spatial RRS measure (divergence index) and neighborhood socioeconomic status (NSES) index for participants' residing Census tracts, in addition to participant baseline data, to examine associations between RRS and sociodemographic factors (NSES, education, race) and residential exposure to spatiotemporal model-predicted PM and NO levels. We fit random-effects meta-analysis models to pool estimates across adjusted cohort-specific multilevel models.
Analytic sample included eligible participants in CHS (N = 3,605), MESA (4,785), REGARDS (22,649), NHS (90,415), NHSII (91,654), HPFS (32,625), WHI-OS (77,680), and WHI-CT (56,639). In adjusted univariate models, a quartile higher RRS was associated with 3.73% higher PM exposure (95% CI: 2.14%, 5.32%), and an 11.53% higher (95% CI: 10.83%, 12.22%) NO exposure on average. In fully adjusted models, higher RRS was associated with 3.25% higher PM exposure (95% CI: 1.45%, 5.05%; < 0.05) and 10.22% higher NO exposure (95% CI: 6.69%, 13.74%; < 0.001) on average.
Our findings indicate that RRS is associated with the differential distribution of poor air quality independent of NSES or individual race, suggesting it may be a relevant confounder to be considered in future air pollution epidemiology studies.
我们研究了种族居住隔离(RRS)——一种根本的疾病成因——在考虑了其他邻里和个体层面的社会人口因素后,是否与空气污染独立相关,以便更好地理解其作为空气污染与健康研究中混杂因素的潜在作用。
我们汇总了八个大型队列的数据,将研究对象限定为1999年至2005年间至少被观察过一次的非西班牙裔黑人和白人城市居民参与者。除了参与者的基线数据外,我们还使用2000年十年一次的人口普查数据,得出参与者居住普查区的空间RRS测量值(差异指数)和邻里社会经济地位(NSES)指数,以研究RRS与社会人口因素(NSES、教育程度、种族)以及居住环境中时空模型预测的PM和NO水平之间的关联。我们拟合随机效应荟萃分析模型,以汇总经调整的特定队列多水平模型的估计值。
分析样本包括CHS(N = 3,605)、MESA(4,785)、REGARDS(22,649)、NHS(90,415)、NHSII(91,654)、HPFS(32,625)、WHI - OS(77,680)和WHI - CT(56,639)中的符合条件的参与者。在调整后的单变量模型中,RRS每升高一个四分位数,PM暴露平均增加3.73%(95%置信区间:2.14%,5.32%),NO暴露平均增加11.53%(95%置信区间:10.83%,12.22%)。在完全调整后的模型中,较高的RRS与PM暴露平均增加3.25%(95%置信区间:1.45%,5.05%;P < 0.05)和NO暴露平均增加10.22%(95%置信区间:6.69%,13.74%;P < 0.001)相关。
我们的研究结果表明,RRS与空气质量差的差异分布相关,独立于NSES或个体种族,这表明它可能是未来空气污染流行病学研究中需要考虑的一个相关混杂因素。