Fang J, Madhavan S, Bosworth W, Alderman M H
Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10461, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 1998 Aug;47(4):469-76. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00128-2.
The objective of this research was to determine the effect of residential racial segregation on all-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality in New York City. A cross-sectional study of residents in New York City was conducted linking mortality records from 1988 through 1994, to the 1990 United States Census data stratified by zipcode. All-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality rates for non-Hispanic blacks and whites were estimated by zipcode. Zipcodes were aggregated according to the degree of residential segregation (predominantly (> or = 75%) white and black areas) and mortality rates were compared. Multiple regression analysis was used to associate population characteristics with mortality. In New York City, although overall mortality rates of blacks exceed whites, these rates varied substantially by locality according to the pattern of racial segregation. Whites living in the higher (mainly white) socioeconomic areas had lower mortality rates than whites living in predominantly black areas (1473.7 vs 1934.1 for males, and 909.9 vs 1414.7 for females for all-cause mortality). This was true for all age groups. By contrast, elderly blacks living in black areas, despite their less favorable socioeconomic status, had lower mortality rates for all-cause, total cardiovascular disease, and coronary heart disease, than did those living in white areas, even after adjusting for available socioeconomic variables. Racial segregation in residence is independently associated with mortality. Within racially segregated areas, members of the dominant group, for all age, among whites and elderly blacks, enjoy outcomes superior both to members of the minority racial group of their community, and to members of the same race residing in other areas, where they are in the minority, independent of socio-economic status.
本研究的目的是确定居住种族隔离对纽约市全因死亡率和心血管疾病死亡率的影响。对纽约市居民进行了一项横断面研究,将1988年至1994年的死亡率记录与按邮政编码分层的1990年美国人口普查数据相联系。按邮政编码估计非西班牙裔黑人和白人的全因死亡率和心血管疾病死亡率。根据居住隔离程度(主要是(≥75%)白人区和黑人区)对邮政编码进行汇总,并比较死亡率。使用多元回归分析将人口特征与死亡率相关联。在纽约市,尽管黑人的总体死亡率超过白人,但根据种族隔离模式,这些比率在不同地区有很大差异。生活在较高(主要是白人)社会经济地区的白人死亡率低于主要生活在黑人地区的白人(全因死亡率男性为1473.7对1934.1,女性为909.9对1414.7)。所有年龄组都是如此。相比之下,生活在黑人地区的老年黑人,尽管其社会经济地位较差,但即使在对可用的社会经济变量进行调整后,其全因、总心血管疾病和冠心病的死亡率仍低于生活在白人地区的老年黑人。居住种族隔离与死亡率独立相关。在种族隔离地区,在所有年龄段中,占主导地位群体的成员,在白人和老年黑人中,其健康结果优于其所在社区的少数种族群体成员,也优于居住在其他地区的同种族成员(在其他地区他们属于少数群体),且与社会经济地位无关。