Schnake-Mahl Alina, Anfuso Giancarlo, Bilal Usama, Goldstein Neal D, Purtle Jonathan, Hernandez Stephanie M, Eberth Jan M
Department of Health Management and Policy, Dornsife School of Public Health, Urban Health Collaborative, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Urban Health Collaborative, Drexel Dornsife School of Public Health, 3600 Market St, Room 730, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Mar 19;25(1):1058. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22221-5.
Health and health disparities vary substantially by geography, including geopolitical boundaries such as United States congressional districts. Every ten years congressional districts for the House of Representatives are redistricted, but occasionally the Courts step in and force states to redistrict gerrymandered congressional maps. Analyses of court mandated redistricting decisions often focus on the distribution of voters by political party and race, but less is known about how health and health disparities are distributed across congressional districts before and after redistricting. In this analysis, we examine how the magnitude of disparities varied between and within congressional districts in Pennsylvania, before and after the state Supreme Court of Pennsylvania's decision ordering a redistricting in 2018 that produced less politically gerrymandered districts.
Using georeferenced vital statistics data from 2013-2015 (before the redistricting), we explore levels of and disparities in infant mortality rates (IMR) and deaths of despair (DoD) using boundaries from before (Congresses 113-115) and after (Congress 116) this redistricting.
Using consistent mortality data (2013-2015) and boundaries from before and after the 2018 redistricting, we find that after redistricting disparities in infant mortality and deaths of despair between congressional districts were slightly wider for all educational groups except for those with less than a high school degree, and slightly narrower for all racial-ethnic groups other than for Hispanic and non-Hispanic White populations, compared with before redistricting.
Understanding how disparities vary between and within districts after redistricting can inform our understanding of the relationships between geopolitical boundaries, election processes, and health disparities.
健康及健康差异在地域上有很大不同,包括美国国会选区等地缘政治边界。众议院的国会选区每十年重新划分一次,但有时法院会介入并迫使各州重新划分被不公正划分的国会选区地图。对法院强制重新划分选区决定的分析通常集中在按政党和种族划分的选民分布上,但对于重新划分选区前后健康及健康差异在国会选区中的分布情况了解较少。在本分析中,我们研究了在宾夕法尼亚州最高法院于2018年下令重新划分选区以减少政治上的不公正划分之前和之后,宾夕法尼亚州国会选区之间及内部差异的程度如何变化。
利用2013 - 2015年(重新划分选区之前)的地理参考生命统计数据,我们使用此次重新划分选区之前(第113 - 115届国会)和之后(第116届国会)的边界,探讨婴儿死亡率(IMR)和绝望死亡人数(DoD)的水平及差异。
使用一致的死亡率数据(2013 - 2015年)以及2018年重新划分选区前后的边界,我们发现重新划分选区后,除了高中以下学历人群外,所有教育组别的国会选区之间婴儿死亡率和绝望死亡人数的差异略有扩大,而除西班牙裔和非西班牙裔白人人口外,所有种族 - 族裔群体的差异与重新划分选区之前相比略有缩小。
了解重新划分选区后各选区之间及内部差异如何变化,有助于我们理解地缘政治边界、选举过程和健康差异之间的关系。