Xie Tiffany H, Peek Monica E, Tabit Corey E, Tung Elizabeth L
Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Section of General Internal Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Urban Health. 2025 Jun 18. doi: 10.1007/s11524-025-00983-y.
While there is growing awareness of discriminatory housing policies and their adverse impacts on health, little is known about how housing policy may promote health equity. We focused on the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC), the largest affordable housing program in the United States, and examined how living in neighborhoods with LIHTC housing may moderate associations between elevated blood pressure and race/ethnicity in Chicago, IL. A retrospective cohort included 15,339 adult patients at an academic medical center from 2018 to 2019. We used mixed-effects hierarchal logistic regression models to examine elevated blood pressure (diastolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mmHg or systolic blood pressure ≥ 140 mmHg) as a function of race/ethnicity, LIHTC, and race/ethnicity-LIHTC interaction effects, adjusting for patient- and neighborhood-level covariates. A majority were female (63.2%) and non-Hispanic Black (57.6%), with an average age of 50.2 years (SD 19.1). One in ten (9.9%) patients lived in a census tract with LIHTC. Overall, Black patients had 2.52 times the adjusted odds of elevated blood pressure compared to White patients (95% CI = 2.25-2.82). In models examining the moderating effects of LIHTC, the odds ratio of hypertension in Black patients vs. White patients was reduced from 2.62 to 1.52, representing a 67.9% reduction in the difference between Black and White patients. Notably, Black patients, who have been disproportionately impacted by discriminatory housing policies, were the only group found to have moderating effects associated with LIHTC. Housing policies may mitigate neighborhood effects associated with racial disparity, possibly supporting efforts to achieve health equity.
虽然人们越来越意识到歧视性住房政策及其对健康的不利影响,但对于住房政策如何促进健康公平却知之甚少。我们聚焦于美国最大的经济适用房项目——低收入住房税收抵免(LIHTC),并研究了居住在有LIHTC住房的社区如何缓和伊利诺伊州芝加哥市高血压与种族/族裔之间的关联。一项回顾性队列研究纳入了2018年至2019年在一家学术医疗中心的15339名成年患者。我们使用混合效应分层逻辑回归模型,将高血压(舒张压≥90mmHg或收缩压≥140mmHg)作为种族/族裔、LIHTC以及种族/族裔-LIHTC交互效应的函数进行分析,并对患者层面和社区层面的协变量进行了调整。大多数患者为女性(63.2%)且是非西班牙裔黑人(57.6%),平均年龄为50.2岁(标准差19.1)。十分之一(9.9%)的患者居住在有LIHTC的普查区。总体而言,与白人患者相比,黑人患者高血压调整后的患病几率是其2.52倍(95%置信区间=2.25-2.82)。在研究LIHTC调节作用的模型中,黑人患者与白人患者相比的高血压优势比从2.62降至1.52,这表明黑人和白人患者之间的差异减少了67.9%。值得注意的是,受歧视性住房政策影响尤为严重的黑人患者是唯一被发现有与LIHTC相关调节作用的群体。住房政策可能会减轻与种族差异相关的社区影响,这可能有助于实现健康公平的努力。