Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,695,308 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Separate and unequal: residential segregation and estimated cancer risks associated with ambient air toxics in U.S. metropolitan areas.


This study examines links between racial residential segregation and estimated ambient air toxics exposures and their associated cancer risks using modeled concentration estimates from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's National Air Toxics Assessment. We combined pollutant pol·lut·ant
n.
Something that pollutes, especially a waste material that contaminates air, soil, or water.
 concentration estimates with potencies to calculate cancer risks by census tract A census tract, census area, or census district is a particular community defined for the purpose of taking a census. Usually these coincide with the limits of cities, towns or other administrative areas and several tracts commonly exist within a county.  for 309 metropolitan areas in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . This information was combined with socioeconomic status socioeconomic status,
n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion.
 (SES) measures from the 1990 Census. Estimated cancer risks associated with ambient air toxics were highest in tracts located in metropolitan areas that were highly segregated. Disparities between racial/ethnic groups were also wider in more segregated metropolitan areas. Multivariate The use of multiple variables in a forecasting model.  modeling showed that, after controlling for tract-level SES measures, increasing segregation amplified the cancer risks associated with ambient air toxics for all racial groups combined [highly segregated areas: relative cancer risk (RCR RCR Richard Childress Racing
RCR responsible conduct of research
RCR Royal College of Radiologists (UK; also seen as RCOR)
RCR Royal Canadian Regiment
RCR Rockcliff Resources Inc (Sudbury, ON, Canada) 
) = 1.04; 95% confidence interval confidence interval,
n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%.
 (CI), 1.01-107; extremely segregated areas: RCR = 1.32; 95% CI, 1.28-1.36]. This segregation effect was strongest for Hispanics (highly segregated areas: RCR = 1.09; 95% CI, 1.01-1.17; extremely segregated areas: RCR = 1.74; 95% CI, 1.61-1.88) and weaker among whites (highly segregated areas: RCR = 1.04; 95% CI, 1.01-1.08; extremely segregated areas: RCR = 1.28; 95% CI, 1.24-1.33), African Americans African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  (highly segregated areas: RCR = 1.09; 95% CI, 0.98-1.21; extremely segregated areas: RCR = 1.38; 95% CI, 1.24-1.53), and Asians (highly segregated areas: RCR = 1.10; 95% CI, 0.97-1.24; extremely segregated areas: RCR = 1.32; 95% CI, 1.16-1.51). Results suggest that disparities associated with ambient air toxics are affected by segregation and that these exposures may have health significance for populations across racial lines. Key words: air toxics, cancer risk, environmental justice, health disparity, racial disparity, segregation. Environ Health Perspect 114:386-393 (2006). doi:10.1289/ehp.8500 available via http://dx.doi.org/[Online 19 October 2005]

**********

Nearly 80% of the approximately 280 million people living in the United States reside in metropolitan areas (U.S. Bureau of the Census Noun 1. Bureau of the Census - the bureau of the Commerce Department responsible for taking the census; provides demographic information and analyses about the population of the United States
Census Bureau
 2004). Environmental health researchers and public health practitioners have recently begun to focus on the links between the urban built environment, social inequality, and community health and well-being (Frumkin 2002, 2003; Jackson 2002; Northridge et al. 2003). Despite the proliferation proliferation /pro·lif·er·a·tion/ (pro-lif?er-a´shun) the reproduction or multiplication of similar forms, especially of cells.prolif´erativeprolif´erous

pro·lif·er·a·tion
n.
 of research on this issue, there is a lack of scientific consensus about what it is about neighborhood and other area-level variables that affect health. Neighborhood-level factors affect individual health by influencing access to quality foods, especially fresh fruits and vegetables and affordable supermarkets, and access to crucial services, such as health care, parks, and open space (Diez-Roux 2003; Morland et al. 2002; Transportation and Land Use Coalition 2002). Other key neighborhood factors that affect health include the social environment (social capital, cohesion, and crime rates) (Kawachi and Berkman 2003; Wallace and Wallace 1998; Wallace 1988) and the physical environment (traffic density, housing quality, and abandoned properties) (Reynolds et al. 2002; Shenassa et al. 2004; Wallace 1990).

Environmental health researchers, sociologists, policy makers, and advocates concerned about environmental justice have argued that residents of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
 who are concentrated in neighborhoods with high levels of poverty are also disproportionately exposed to physical environments that adversely affect their health and well-being. Research on race and class differences in exposures to toxics varies widely, and although by no means unequivocal, much of the evidence suggests a pattern of disproportionate exposures to toxics and associated health risks among communities of color and the poor, with racial differences often persisting across economic strata (Burke 1993; Morello-Frosch et al. 2001, 2002a, 2002b; Pastor et al. 2001; Perlin et al. 2001; Sadd et al. 1999). Such evidence has important implications for policy making, but few studies elucidate e·lu·ci·date  
v. e·lu·ci·dat·ed, e·lu·ci·dat·ing, e·lu·ci·dates

v.tr.
To make clear or plain, especially by explanation; clarify.

v.intr.
To give an explanation that serves to clarify.
 links between social inequality and residential segregation with exposures to environmental hazards 'Environmental hazard' is a generic term for any situation or state of events which poses a threat to the surrounding environment. This term incorporates topics like pollution and Natural Hazards such as storms and earthquakes.  (Morello-Frosch 2002; Morello-Frosch et al. 2001).

Wide-ranging and complex political and socioeconomic forces, coupled with patterns of industrialization industrialization

Process of converting to a socioeconomic order in which industry is dominant. The changes that took place in Britain during the Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and 19th century led the way for the early industrializing nations of western Europe and
 and development, have segregated people of color Noun 1. people of color - a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race (especially Blacks)
people of colour, colour, color

race - people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important
, particularly African Americans, into neighborhoods with some of the highest indices of urban poverty and deprivation (Peet 1984; Schultz et al. 2002; Walker 1985; Williams and Collins 2001, 2004). Indeed, uneven industrial development, real estate speculation, discrimination in government and private financing, workplace discrimination, and exclusionary zoning have led to systemic racial segregation Noun 1. racial segregation - segregation by race
petty apartheid - racial segregation enforced primarily in public transportation and hotels and restaurants and other public places
 among diverse communities with important implications for community health and individual well-being (Logan 1978; Logan and Molotch 1987; Morello-Frosch 2002; Sinton 1997; Wilson 1996). Studies connecting residential segregation to health outcomes and health disparities

Main article: Race and health


Health disparities (also called health inequalities in some countries) refer to gaps in the quality of health and health care across racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups.
 represent a relatively new direction of research. Much of this work has focused on the health impacts of residential segregation on African Americans (LaVeist 1989, 1992, 1993; Polednak 1991, 1993, 1996a, 1996b, 1997). Results of this research generally show that residential segregation is associated with elevated risks of adult and infant mortality (hardware) infant mortality - It is common lore among hackers (and in the electronics industry at large) that the chances of sudden hardware failure drop off exponentially with a machine's time since first use (that is, until the relatively distant time at which enough mechanical  (Collins and Williams 1999; LaVeist 1989, 1992, 1993; Polednak 1991, 1993, 1996a, 1996b, 1997; Williams and Collins 2001) and tuberculosis (Acevedo-Garcia 2001).

Although elements for understanding the relationship between residential segregation and community environmental health can be found separately in the literature of both sociology and environmental justice, only one previous investigation has attempted to combine these two lines of inquiry to analyze the relationship between outdoor air pollution exposure and segregation (Lopez 2002). Some researchers have recently argued that residential segregation is a crucial place to start for understanding the origins and persistence of environmental health disparities (Gee and Payne-Sturges 2004; Lopez 2002; Morello-Frosch 2002; Morello-Frosch et al. 2001; Pulido 1994, 2000; Pulido et al. 1996). Gee and Payne-Sturges (2004) propose a conceptual framework For the concept in aesthetics and art criticism, see .

A conceptual framework is used in research to outline possible courses of action or to present a preferred approach to a system analysis project.
 for understanding how race-based segregation may lead to a disproportionate burden of cumulative exposures to potential environmental hazards among certain communities while enhancing their vulnerability or susceptibility to the toxic effects of exposures due to individual and area-level stressors, and lack of neighborhood resources. In this study we seek to operationalize parts of this conceptual framework by examining links between racial residential segregation and estimated cancer risks associated with modeled ambient air toxics exposures. Recent analysis of modeled national estimates suggests that ambient concentrations of hazardous air pollutants pollutants

see environmental pollution.
 (HAPs) exceed benchmark risk levels for cancer and noncancer end points in many areas of the country (Apelberg et al. 2005; Morello-Frosch et al. 2000; Woodruff et al. 1998). Follow-up studies on air quality as well as stationary and mobile sources of air pollution have found a disproportionate burden of exposures and associated cancer and noncancer health risks for communities of color and poor residents. These studies have examined transportation corridors with high traffic density (Gunier et al. 2003), location of Toxics Release Inventory The Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) is a publicly available database from the EPA that contains information on toxic chemical releases and other waste management activities reported annually by certain covered industry groups as well as federal facilities.  (TRI TRI Toxics Release Inventory (US EPA)
TRI Touch Research Institute
TRI Taux de Rentabilité Interne (French: internal rate of return)
TRI Taux de Rentabilité Interne
TRI Tile Roofing Institute
) and other treatment, storage, and disposal facilities (Morello-Frosch et al. 2002a; Pastor et al. 2001, 2002; Perlin et al. 1999, 2001), and modeled estimates of air toxics from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid.

EPA
abbr.
eicosapentaenoic acid


EPA,
n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic.

EPA,
n.
) Cumulative Exposure Project (CEP CEP congenital erythropoietic porphyria.

CEP
abbr.
congenital erythropoietic porphyria
) and National Air Toxics Assessment (NATA NATA National Athletic Trainers' Association
NATA National Association of Testing Authorities (Australia)
NATA National Air Transportation Association (Alexandria, VA, USA) 
) (Lopez 2002; Morello-Frosch et al. 2002a, 2002b; Pastor et al. 2002, 2004). For this study, we assessed whether racial and economic disparities in estimated cancer risk associated with air toxics are modified by levels of residential segregation in U.S. metropolitan areas.

Materials and Methods

To analyze the relationship between pollution and health risk burdens with race-based residential segregation, we obtained modeled ambient air toxics concentration estimates from the U.S. EPA's NATA and combined these data with cancer potency information. We then integrated these cancer risk estimates with socioeconomic and demographic information derived from the 1990 U.S. Census (U.S. Census Bureau Noun 1. Census Bureau - the bureau of the Commerce Department responsible for taking the census; provides demographic information and analyses about the population of the United States
Bureau of the Census
 1991, 1993) for all tracts within 309 metropolitan areas in the continental United States United States territory, including the adjacent territorial waters, located within North America between Canada and Mexico. Also called CONUS. . All data linking, data management, and statistical analysis were performed using SAS (1) (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, www.sas.com) A software company that specializes in data warehousing and decision support software based on the SAS System. Founded in 1976, SAS is one of the world's largest privately held software companies. See SAS System.  (version 8.2; SAS Institute SAS Institute Inc., headquartered in Cary, North Carolina, USA, has been a major producer of software since it was founded in 1976 by Anthony Barr, James Goodnight, John Sall and Jane Helwig.  Inc., Cary, NC).

Modeled estimates of outdoor air toxics concentrations. The U.S. EPA's most recent publicly accessible national-scale air toxics assessment was conducted for 1996 and estimates the annual average concentration for a subset of the 188 HAPs listed in section 112 of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments (33 pollutants, including diesel particulate matter Diesel particulate matter (DPM) refers to the particulate components of diesel exhaust, which include diesel soot and aerosols such as ash particulates, metallic abrasion particles, sulfates, and silicates. ). The methods used to generate census-tract-level estimates of risk are described in detail by the U.S. EPA and others (Rosenbaum et al. 1999; U.S. EPA 2005a). Using an algorithm based on the Assessment System for Population Exposure Nationwide (ASPEN) model, NATA generates concentration estimates using a Gaussian dispersion modeling approach that accounts for meteorologic me·te·or·ol·o·gy  
n.
The science that deals with the phenomena of the atmosphere, especially weather and weather conditions.



[French météorologie, from Greek
 conditions, wind speed, and atmospheric chemistry Atmospheric chemistry is a branch of atmospheric science in which the chemistry of the Earth's atmosphere and that of other planets is studied. It is a multidisciplinary field of research and draws on environmental chemistry, physics, meteorology, computer modeling, oceanography, , including processes such as reactive decay, secondary pollutant formation, and deposition. NATA then applies the model algorithm to the U.S. EPA's National Toxics Inventory, which is compiled using five primary information sources: state and local toxic air pollutant inventories, existing databases related to the U.S. EPA's air toxics regulatory program, the U.S. EPA's TRI database, estimates using mobile source methodology (developed by the U.S. EPA's Office of Transportation and Air Quality), and emission estimates generated from emission factors An emission factor can be defined as the average emission rate of a given pollutant for a given source, relative to units of activity. Emission factors can be used to derive estimates of gas emissions (for instance, greenhouse gas emissions) based on the amount of fuel combusted  and activity data (U.S. EPA 2005a).

The model then allocates air toxics concentration estimates in statewide grids that can be used to create data surfaces and for interpolation interpolation

In mathematics, estimation of a value between two known data points. A simple example is calculating the mean (see mean, median, and mode) of two population counts made 10 years apart to estimate the population in the fifth year.
 and allocation to census tracts (U.S. EPA 2005a). The model estimates long-term HAP HAP. An old word which signifies to catch; as, "to hap the rent," to hap the deed poll." Techn. Dict. h.t.  concentrations attributable to anthropogenic an·thro·po·gen·ic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to anthropogenesis.

2. Caused by humans: anthropogenic degradation of the environment.
 sources within 50 km of each census tract centroid centroid

In geometry, the centre of mass of a two-dimensional figure or three-dimensional solid. Thus the centroid of a two-dimensional figure represents the point at which it could be balanced if it were cut out of, for example, sheet metal.
. Each pollutant concentration is a spatial average that approximates the population-weighted average of outdoor HAP concentrations experienced within a census tract over the course of a year. There are > 60,000 census tracts in the continental United States, with each averaging between 4,000 and 5,000 residents. Specifics of the model are discussed elsewhere (Rosenbaum et al. 1999; U.S. EPA 2005a). We assessed air toxics concentrations for stationary emissions sources, which include point-source emissions (from facilities required to report emissions to the TRI, including large chemical manufacturers, refineries, and electrical power plants) and smaller area sources (including dry cleaners, auto body shops, and chrome plating Chromium plating solutions
There are two types of chromium plating: industrial and decorative. Industrial chromium plating is also referred to as Hard Chrome or Engineered Chrome.
 facilities); and for mobile emissions sources, which include on-road vehicles (e.g., trucks and cars) and nonroad sources (e.g., airplanes, trains, construction equipment, and farm equipment) (U.S. EPA 2005a). Estimated outdoor concentrations also included a background portion attributable to long-range transport, resuspension Noun 1. resuspension - a renewed suspension of insoluble particles after they have been precipitated
suspension - a mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy
 of historical emissions, and natural sources derived from measurements taken at clean air locations remote from known emissions sources. These values were treated as a constant across all census tracts and added to the modeled concentration estimates from mobile and stationary emissions sources.

Assessment of cancer risks. We combined modeled HAP concentration estimates with cancer potency information to estimate the distribution of cumulative cancer health risks in accordance with California's "hot spots hot spots

acute moist dermatitis.
" guidelines [Office of Environmental Health Hazard health hazard Occupational safety Any agent or activity posing a potential hazard to health. Cf Physical hazard.  Assessment (OEHHA OEHHA Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment ) 2003]. The guidelines provide procedures for use in the preparation of cancer and noncancer health risk assessments required under California's Air Toxics "Hot Spots" Information and Assessment Act (1987). This law established a statewide program for the inventory of air toxics emissions from individual facilities as well as requirements for risk assessment and public notification of potential health risk (OEHHA 2003).

We assessed cancer risks using inhalation inhalation /in·ha·la·tion/ (in?hah-la´shun)
1. the drawing of air or other substances into the lungs.inhala´tional

2. the drawing of an aerosolized drug into the lungs with the breath.

3.
 unit risk (IUR IUR International User Requirements (for communications interception)
IUR Inventory Update Rule
IUR Ideal Ultimate Result
) estimates in micrograms per cubic meter Noun 1. cubic meter - a metric unit of volume or capacity equal to 1000 liters
cubic metre, kiloliter, kilolitre

metric capacity unit - a capacity unit defined in metric terms
 for each carcinogenic carcinogenic

having a capacity for carcinogenesis.
 compound. Inhalation unit risk estimates are defined as the individual lifetime excess risk due to a chronic lifetime exposure to one unit of pollutant concentration (U.S. EPA 2003). Potency estimates generally assume nonthreshold, low-dose linearity unless there is compelling evidence to the contrary, and are derived from occupational or animal studies. The unit risk calculated from occupational studies is based on a maximum-likelihood estimate of the dose--response data. Potencies derived from animal data represent a 95% upper bound estimate of the probability of contracting cancer.

The U.S. EPA, the California Environmental Protection Agency The California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA) was created in 1991 by Governor Pete Wilson, through an executive order.[1] The agency combined six board, departments, and offices into one cabinet-level office:[2]
 (CaI-EPA), and the International Agency for Research on Cancer The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC, or CIRC in its French acronym) is an intergovernmental agency forming part of the World Health Organisation of the United Nations.

Its main offices are in Lyon, France.
 (IARC) identify carcinogens Carcinogens
Substances in the environment that cause cancer, presumably by inducing mutations, with prolonged exposure.

Mentioned in: Colon Cancer, Rectal Cancer
 based on the scientific weight of evidence for carcinogenicity carcinogenicity /car·ci·no·ge·nic·i·ty/ (kahr?si-no-je-nis´i-te) the ability or tendency to produce cancer.

carcinogenicity

the ability or tendency to produce cancer.
, which is derived from human and animal data. The weight-of-evidence descriptors for carcinogenicity used by various agencies vary somewhat, and the U.S. EPA is in the process of revising their cancer risk assessment guidelines (U.S. EPA 2003), but the categories used are similar. Currently, the U.S. EPA is proposing to classify potential carcinogens based on the following weight-of-evidence categories: a) carcinogenic to humans, b) likely to be carcinogenic to humans, c) suggestive evidence of carcinogenic potential, d) inadequate information to assess carcinogenic potential, e) not likely to be carcinogenic to humans. Air toxics classified in any of the first three descriptor (1) A word or phrase that identifies a document in an indexed information retrieval system.

(2) A category name used to identify data.

(operating system) descriptor
 categories were evaluated in this analysis (U.S. EPA 2003). We also used the California OEHHA (2002) IUR estimate for diesel particulates to calculate an estimated lifetime cancer risk for diesel particulates. Although the U.S. EPA does not have an IUR for diesel, Cal-EPA has derived a potency estimate for this mixture of compounds and has classified it as a carcinogen carcinogen: see cancer.
carcinogen

Agent that can cause cancer. Exposure to one or more carcinogens, including certain chemicals, radiation, and certain viruses, can initiate cancer under conditions not completely understood.
 under Proposition 65 (OEHHA 2005). Similarly, IARC has classified diesel particulates as a probable carcinogen (IARC 2005).

Estimated cancer risks for each pollutant in each census tract were derived with the following formula:

[R.sub.ij] = [C.sub.ij] x [IUR.sub.j], [1]

where [R.sub.ij] is the estimate of individual lifetime cancer risk from pollutant j in census tract i, [C.sub.ij] is the concentration of HAP j in micrograms per cubic meter in census tract i, and IUR is the IUR estimate for pollutant j in micrograms per cubic meter. The cancer risks of different air toxics were assumed to be additive and were summed together in each census tract to estimate a total individual lifetime cancer risk in each tract. To roughly estimate the number of cancer cases from lifetime exposures, we multiplied the total cancer risk in each census tract by the total tract population.

1990 census data. The tract-level health risk data were matched with area level socioeconomic and demographic information from the 1990 Census (summary tapes file 1 and 3; U.S. Census Bureau 1991, 1993). These data were used to derive the following variables used in our analysis.

Segregation. Massey and Denton have identified several conceptual dimensions of segregation, all of which were conceived with a particular context in mind: that of urban segregation of blacks from whites in the United States (Massey and Denton 1988, 1989; Massey et al. 1996; U.S. Bureau of the Census 2004). These concepts and measures have been expanded to consider the segregation of Hispanic-American and Asian-American populations from whites (Massey 2004; Massey and Fong 1990). To maximize congruence con·gru·ence  
n.
1.
a. Agreement, harmony, conformity, or correspondence.

b. An instance of this: "What an extraordinary congruence of genius and era" 
 with the theory and development of the segregation indices, we have also constrained con·strain  
tr.v. con·strained, con·strain·ing, con·strains
1. To compel by physical, moral, or circumstantial force; oblige: felt constrained to object. See Synonyms at force.

2.
 our analysis to metropolitan areas of the United States.

Of the various conceptual dimensions of segregation, evenness as measured by the dissimilarity index has most often been employed in health studies (Acevedo-Garcia et al. 2003; Collins and Williams 1999). Chiefly for this reason, we limited our measure of segregation to (un)evenness. Evenness measures the degree to which the proportion of a particular racial or ethnic group living in residential areas (e.g., census tracts) approximates that group's relative percentage of an entire metropolitan area. It is measured using the dissimilarity index (D), which is interpreted as the proportion of the racial group of interest that would need to relocate to another census tract to achieve an even distribution throughout a metropolitan area. Although most health studies involving measurement of segregation are limited to dyadic Two. Refers to two components being used.

(programming) dyadic - binary (describing an operator).

Compare monadic.
 comparisons, such as black/white segregation, we elected to incorporate the multigroup dissimilarity index (Dm), a version of the dissimilarity index generalized to capture concurrent segregation between multiple racial/ethnic groups (Iceland 2004; Sakoda 1981). The Dm has been developed to characterize segregation in the more typically multiethnic mul·ti·eth·nic  
adj.
Of, relating to, or including several ethnic groups.

Adj. 1. multiethnic - involving several ethnic groups
multi-ethnic
 contemporary metropolis. We estimated multigroup segregation using the following formula:

Dm = [summation summation n. the final argument of an attorney at the close of a trial in which he/she attempts to convince the judge and/or jury of the virtues of the client's case. (See: closing argument) ]([t.sub.i] [summation]|/[p.sub.im] - [P.sub.m]|)/ [2 T[summation][P.sub.m](1-[P.sub.m])], [2]

where [t.sub.i] is the number of residents in tract i, [p.sub.im] is the proportion of people in subgroup sub·group  
n.
1. A distinct group within a group; a subdivision of a group.

2. A subordinate group.

3. Mathematics A group that is a subset of a group.

tr.v.
 m in census tract i, T is the total number of residents in the metropolitan area, and [P.sub.m] is the proportion of people in subgroup m in the metropolitan area. The denominator denominator

the bottom line of a fraction; the base population on which population rates such as birth and death rates are calculated.

denominator 
 sums the maximum segregation possible given the relative proportion of each racial/ethnic group in the metropolitan area. In sum, the numerator numerator

the upper part of a fraction.


numerator relationship
see additive genetic relationship.


numerator Epidemiology The upper part of a fraction
 of the Dm is the minimum number of people who would need to move from one neighborhood to another so that the distribution of each racial/ethnic group in every neighborhood matches that of the metropolis as a whole. The denominator is the minimum number of people who would need to move to achieve this goal, starting from a context of complete segregation. Thus, the index varies from a value of 0, meaning no segregation exists (i.e., all neighborhoods have exactly the same distribution of people by race/ethnicity), to 1, complete segregation (i.e., each neighborhood is populated pop·u·late  
tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates
1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people.

2.
 by only one racial/ethnic group). Intermediate values indicate a continuous range of racial/ ethnic stratification stratification (Lat.,=made in layers), layered structure formed by the deposition of sedimentary rocks. Changes between strata are interpreted as the result of fluctuations in the intensity and persistence of the depositional agent, e.g.  of neighborhoods within a metropolis. One final note is that Dm is not composition dependent; consequently, this measure can be used to compare a diverse array of metropolitan areas, and it is not affected by the relative proportion of the demographic groups being examined.

Because air toxics concentration estimates were available only for the continental United States, we restricted our investigation to metropolitan areas within the same geographic reach. These metropolitan areas, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), formerly the Bureau of the Budget, is an agency of the federal government that evaluates, formulates, and coordinates management procedures and program objectives within and among departments and agencies of the Executive Branch.  based on data from the 1990 U.S. Census, are aggregations of counties that may (and often do) cross state boundaries Noun 1. state boundary - the boundary between two states
state line

border, borderline, boundary line, delimitation, mete - a line that indicates a boundary
. They are intended to describe an area dominated by a central city (with a population of at least 50,000) and surrounded by communities linked by housing and employment patterns (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1994). Because the HAP concentration data are available at the census tract level (1990 tract definitions), we used 1990 census tracts as a proxy for "neighborhood." These areas are defined in advance of the decennial de·cen·ni·al  
adj.
1. Relating to or lasting for ten years.

2. Occurring every ten years.

n.
A tenth anniversary.
 censuses and are nonoverlapping, mutually exclusive Adj. 1. mutually exclusive - unable to be both true at the same time
contradictory

incompatible - not compatible; "incompatible personalities"; "incompatible colors"
 divisions of territory. Census tracts are nested within county boundaries and are intended to describe areas that are roughly comparable in population size (most tracts contain between 1,000 and 8,000 residents) and roughly consistent internally with respect to socioeconomic conditions. Some limitations of using census tracts as an approximation approximation /ap·prox·i·ma·tion/ (ah-prok?si-ma´shun)
1. the act or process of bringing into proximity or apposition.

2. a numerical value of limited accuracy.
 for neighborhoods have been described (Krieger et al. 2003). In addition, census tracts are the only construct approximating neighborhoods defined with a consistent methodology across all metropolitan areas of the United States.

We based our calculations on numbers of people in six exhaustive and nonoverlapping racial/ethnic groups as defined in the 1990 U.S. Census (U.S. Census Bureau 1991, 1993): Hispanics of any race, non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, Asians and Pacific Islanders Pacific Islander
n.
1. A native or inhabitant of any of the Polynesian, Micronesian, or Melanesian islands of Oceania.

2. A person of Polynesian, Micronesian, or Melanesian descent. See Usage Note at Asian.
, American Indians American Indians: see Americas, antiquity and prehistory of the; Natives, Middle American; Natives, North American; Natives, South American.  and Alaska Natives Alaska Natives are indigenous peoples of the Americas native to the state of Alaska within the United States. They include Inupiat, Yupik, Aleut, and several Native American peoples, including Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, Eyak, and a number of Northern Athabaskan peoples. , and persons of "other" races. We recalculated these indices excluding persons of "other" races. Finding no substantive differences from our earlier calculations, we elected to retain this group in order to capture 100% of the population in each metropolitan area. We stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers.

strat·i·fied
adj.
Arranged in the form of layers or strata.
 the metropolitan areas into three segregation groups for further analysis: low to moderately segregated (Dm = 0.16-0.39), highly segregated (Dm = 0.40-0.60), and extremely segregated (Dm [greater than or equal to] 0.60).

Regional grouping of states. Because previous research has documented regional variation in both the level of racial/ethnic segregation and its causes (Frey and Farley 1996), we developed six broad regional classifications of the continental United States to control for these differences (Figure 1): western states, the three states bordering the Pacific Ocean; border states Border States

The slave states of Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri that were adjacent to the free states of the North during the Civil War.
, the three states sharing a border with Mexico (other than California); southern states Southern States
U.S.

Confederacy

government of 11 Southern states that left the Union in 1860. [Am. Hist.: EB, III: 73]

Dixie

popular name for Southern states in U.S. and for song. [Am. Hist.
, those that ceded to form the Confederate States of America Confederate States of America: see Confederacy.
Confederate States of America
 or Confederacy

Government of the 11 Southern states that seceded from the Union in 1860–61 until its defeat in the American Civil War in 1865.
 during the Civil War (other than Texas); northeastern states, those north of the Mason-Dixon line Mason-Dixon Line, boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland (running between lat. 39°43'26.3"N and lat. 39°43'17.6"N), surveyed by the English team of Charles Mason, a mathematician and astronomer, and Jeremiah Dixon, a mathematician and land surveyor,  and predominantly east of the Appalachian mountains Appalachian Mountains (ăpəlā`chən, –chēən, –lăch`–), mountain system of E North America, extending in a broad belt c.1,600 mi (2,570 km) SW from the Gaspé Peninsula in Quebec prov.  (Pennsylvania, Maryland, the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States). , and points northeast); mid-western states, from the western slopes of the Appalachians to the Mississippi River Mississippi River

River, central U.S. It rises at Lake Itasca in Minnesota and flows south, meeting its major tributaries, the Missouri and the Ohio rivers, about halfway along its journey to the Gulf of Mexico.
 Valley (Ohio, West Virginia West Virginia, E central state of the United States. It is bordered by Pennsylvania and Maryland (N), Virginia (E and S), and Kentucky and, across the Ohio R., Ohio (W). Facts and Figures


Area, 24,181 sq mi (62,629 sq km). Pop.
, and Kentucky west to Missouri, Iowa, and Minnesota); and mountains and plains states, those dominated by the central plains and Rocky Mountains Rocky Mountains, major mountain system of W North America and easternmost belt of the North American cordillera, extending more than 3,000 mi (4,800 km) from central N.Mex. to NW Alaska; Mt. Elbert (14,431 ft/4,399 m) in Colorado is the highest peak.  (other than the border states).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

Population density. We estimated population density by dividing the number of residents in an area by the square kilometers of that area, as reported in the 1990 Census (U.S. Census Bureau 1991, 1993). Population density is often underestimated by this method because of the inclusion of large areas of uninhabited (and often uninhabitable) land area. To more accurately reflect the density of human habitation HABITATION, civil law. It was the right of a person to live in the house of another without prejudice to the property.
     2. It differed from a usufruct in this, that the usufructuary might have applied the house to any purpose, as, a store or manufactory; whereas
 in each census tract, we disaggregated Broken up into parts.  each tract into its constituent block groups (one to nine block groups per tract), estimated the population density for each block group, and then created a population-weighted sum of these population densities to estimate the average population density at which tract residents live.

Population size. Researchers have noted that residential segregation of whites from blacks tends to be higher in metropolitan areas that are older and have larger populations and less recent growth in housing stock (Farley 1977). The influence of a city's age on the level of black/white segregation is not independent of population size. Of these three measures, the population size of a metropolitan area has the clearest link to the volume and concentration of air pollution, even though this link is probably not independent of the local area population density described above. We categorized cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 metropolitan areas into seven categories of population size defined by the Census Bureau, ranging from at least 50,000 to > 5 million (U.S. Census Bureau 1991, 1993).

Poverty and material deprivation. To some degree, area level poverty may explain observed relationships between racial/ethnic segregation and estimated cancer risks associated with ambient air toxics exposures. Therefore, we examined poverty status as determined by 1990 U.S. Census household income and composition, in three categories: below the poverty level, above the poverty level but less than twice the poverty level, and at least twice the poverty level. The poverty level (which varies by household size and age composition) equaled $12,647 in 1989 for a family of two adults and two children (U.S. Bureau of the Census 2004). In addition to area-level poverty, we developed a census-tract measure of material deprivation by calculating a version of the Townsend index (Krieger et al. 2003; Townsend et al. 1988) adapted for U.S. census data by summing four Z-scores for the proportion of home owners home owner home npropriétaire occupant , the proportion of car owners, the proportion of residents living in crowded conditions (at least one person per room), and the proportion of unemployed persons among workers.

Civic engagement. Metropolitan areas characterized by racial/ethnic segregation may result in relative disenfranchisement dis·en·fran·chise  
tr.v. dis·en·fran·chised, dis·en·fran·chis·ing, dis·en·fran·chis·es
To disfranchise.



dis
 of racial/ ethnic minority groups. In a highly segregated metropolitan context, political influence and decision-making power are likely to be stratified across racial/ethnic lines and concentrated to serve the interests of racial majority communities (LaVeist 1992, 1993). This alignment of power could have implications for land-use decision making, transportation planning Transportation planning is the field involved with the siting of transportation facilities (generally streets, highways, sidewalks, bike lanes and public transport lines). , and regulatory activities at a regional level in ways that affect ambient air quality in different neighborhoods (LaVeist 1992, 1993; Morello-Frosch 2002; Morello-Frosch et al. 2001; Pastor et al. 2001). We used a measure of voter turnout as a proxy for civic engagement, based on the number of votes cast in the 1996 presidential election (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1998) divided by the adult population in 1990. The finest geographic resolution for this data available across all metropolitan areas was at the county level.

Statistical methods. We calculated a descriptive statistic, population risk index (PRI PRI: see Institutional Revolutionary party.


(Primary Rate Interface) An ISDN service that provides 23 64 Kbps B (Bearer) channels and one 64 Kbps D (Data) channel (23B+D), which is equivalent to the 24 channels of a T1 line.
), to assess potential environmental inequities across race/ethnicity, poverty level, and segregation categories. The PRI is a weighted average of the census-tract-level total cancer risk associated with ambient air toxics (Morello-Frosch et al. 2001; Perlin et al. 1995). The risk index is computed according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the following formula:

[PRI.sub.j] = [summation][R.sub.i][n.sub.im]/[N.sub.Im], [3]

where [R.sub.i] equals the individual lifetime cancer risk estimate in census tract i, [n.sub.im] is the number of people in subpopulation sub·pop·u·la·tion  
n.
A part or subdivision of a population, especially one originating from some other population: microbial subpopulations.

Noun 1.
 m in census tract i, I is the set of all census tracts considered in the analysis (I = [summation]t), and [N.sub.Im] is the total number of people in subpopulation m who reside in all tracts I. The population risk indices for different demographic groups can be compared with each other to graphically assess the extent to which environmental inequities may be occurring.

Because our exposure estimates are based on the ecologic unit of 1990 census tracts, we selected the Poisson regression In statistics, the Poisson regression model attributes to a response variable Y a Poisson distribution whose expected value depends on a predictor variable x, typically in the following way:

 technique to conduct multivariate modeling. To model relative exposure to carcinogenic air pollutants, we estimated rates of the expected number of lifetime cancer cases associated with modeled estimated ambient air toxics levels, by combining modeled concentration estimates with cancer potency information (IURs), and the population at risk in a given census tract. We divided the population of each tract into six categories based on race/ethnicity: Hispanics (of all races), non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks, non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific Islanders, non-Hispanic American Indians and Alaska Natives, and non-Hispanics of other races. The outcome for our Poisson regression models was thus the expected number of cancer cases for members of each race/ethnic group in each census tract. A Poisson linear regression Linear regression

A statistical technique for fitting a straight line to a set of data points.
 model with a robust standard error was used to estimate the average change in estimated cancer incidence associated with changes in segregation level and other covariates.

Results

This analysis included 309 metropolitan areas encompassing 45,710 tracts and > 79% of the population of the United States, including 76% of non-Hispanic whites, 85% of non-Hispanic blacks, 91% of Hispanics (of any race), 87% of Asian/Pacific Islanders Islanders may refer to:
  • New York Islanders, a ice hockey team based in Uniondale, New York that plays on the National Hockey League (NHL).
  • Puerto Rico Islanders, a Puerto Rican soccer team in the USL First Division, that currently play their home games at Juan Ramon
, and 53% of American Indians/Native Alaskans. The average individual lifetime cancer risk estimates for each metropolitan statistical area ranged across several orders of magnitude, with some of the highest risk estimates found in southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region,  and in the midwestern region (data not shown).

Table 1 presents the distribution of estimated cancer risk from air toxics in the U.S. census tracts. The average estimated cancer risk per million from all emissions sources combined was 631.9. This estimate declines significantly after removing diesel (115.5 per million; Table 2). Generally, cancer risk estimates exceeded the regulatory goal of one in a million by several orders of magnitude (Clean Air Act Amendments 1990). Among source contributions, mobile sources make the most significant contribution to estimated cancer risk (on average, 88.3% of total risk with diesel particulates included and 35.7% excluding diesel particulates). This is followed by area sources (7% including diesel particulates and 36% excluding diesel particulates) and then major point sources that contribute less on average to the overall cancer risk burden (1.3% including diesel particulates and 7% excluding diesel particulates).

Figure 1 maps patterns of racial segregation across the 309 metropolitan areas included in this analysis. The background colors indicate how we classified states into regional categories: western, border, southern, northeastern, midwestern, and mountains and plains states. The smaller, darker shapes are metropolitan areas. The map indicates that the northeastern, southern, and midwestern regions have some of the highest levels of multiethnic/racial segregation in the country, whereas the western and mountain and plains states tend to have lower levels of segregation. Table 3 displays the distribution of metropolitan areas, tracts, total population, and racial/ethnic groups by three segregation categories (moderate/low, highly, or extremely segregated). About 75% of metropolitan areas were either highly or extremely segregated (Dm [greater than or equal to] 0.40), and nearly 40% of the census tracts included in this analysis were extremely segregated (Dm [greater than or equal to] 0.60). Nationally, nearly 50% of non-Hispanic blacks, 37% of whites, more than 20% of Hispanics, and 24% of Asians live in extremely segregated metropolitan areas. These patterns vary significantly by geographic region, particularly in the northeastern and midwestern states, where segregation levels are highest.

Figure 2 shows the racial/ethnic distribution of estimated cancer risk associated with air toxics across segregation categories. The y-axis shows a population-weighted individual excess cancer risk estimate for each racial/ethnic group and segregation category. Each line in the graph represents one of the five racial/ethnic groups, with one line representing the total population. The data points to the left are average cancer risk estimates for each racial/ethnic group for all segregation categories combined. The graph shows two patterns: that cancer risks across all metropolitan areas increase with increasing segregation levels for all racial/ethnic groups, and that overall, Hispanics and Asians, followed by African Americans, have some of the highest cancer risk burdens in metropolitan areas with higher segregation levels compared with the average risk across all groups and compared with whites and Native Americans. Figure 3 shows the racial breakdown of cancer risk burden by poverty level. Although there is a persistent racial/ethnic gap in cancer risk across all levels of poverty, there is no gradient that increases with rising area-level poverty, which suggests that the effect of segregation is independent of the impact of poverty on the exposure burdens across racial categories. The data were further examined to assess the racial/ethnic distribution of cancer risk across three segregation levels for each of the three area-level poverty categories. The same positive segregation gradient persisted for each racial group, regardless of poverty category (data not shown). This suggests that although segregation concentrates poverty (Massey and Fischer 2000; Massey et al. 1991), area-level poverty functions independently of segregation to affect estimated cancer risks associated with ambient pollutants. These distributional patterns were very similar when area and mobile source emissions were examined separately. For point-source emissions alone, the gradient across segregation categories was not observed (data not shown).

[FIGURES 2-3 OMITTED]

To examine these variables in a multivariate analysis multivariate analysis,
n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables.

multivariate analysis,
n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously.
, we assessed the relationship between segregation and estimated cancer risk, stratifying by race/ethnicity, and calculating risk ratios for each level of segregation, using low/moderate segregation as the referent ref·er·ent  
n.
A person or thing to which a linguistic expression refers.

Noun 1. referent - something referred to; the object of a reference
 group. Table 4 shows the unadjusted model without controlling for key area-level socioeconomic measures. This model shows a strong cancer risk gradient by segregation category for the total population [highly segregated: relative cancer risk (RCR) = 1.73; extremely segregated: RCR = 2.63] and indicates gradients for each racial/ethnic category with the strongest gradient observed for Hispanics (highly segregated: RCR = 2.44; extremely segregated: RCR = 6.40) and Asians (highly segregated: RCR = 2.25; extremely segregated: RCR = 3.90). Table 5 displays the adjusted model controlling for state regional grouping (six regions), metropolitan area population size, county-level voter turnout, tract-level poverty, tract-level material deprivation score (Townsend index), and tract-level population density. Results indicate that even after controlling for tract-level socioeconomic status (SES) measures, increasing segregation amplifies the cancer risks associated with ambient air toxics for all racial groups combined (highly segregated: RCR = 1.04; extremely segregated: RCR = 1.32). This effect of segregation is strongest for Hispanics (highly segregated: RCR = 1.09; extremely segregated: RCR = 1.74) but is also evident, albeit somewhat weaker, among whites, African Americans, and Asians. The models were also run for the source categories separately and showed strong gradients for mobile and area emission sources and nonsignificant non·sig·nif·i·cant  
adj.
1. Not significant.

2. Having, producing, or being a value obtained from a statistical test that lies within the limits for being of random occurrence.
 effects for point sources (data not shown).

Discussion

In this analysis we examined the relationship between estimated cancer risks from ambient air toxics, tract-level socioeconomic characteristics, and metropolitan-area racial segregation in the continental United States. Much of the average cancer risk is due to emissions from mobile sources, even when diesel particulates are removed from the analysis. We found a persistent relationship between increasing levels of racial/ethnic segregation and increased estimated cancer risk associated with ambient air toxics. Moreover, racial disparities in risk burdens widen with increasing levels of segregation. In examining race and tract-level poverty concurrently, we found a persistent disparity in population-weighted cancer risk among racial/ethnic groups across poverty levels. However, we observed no increasing gradient with increasing poverty, suggesting that segregation affects pollutant burdens in a manner independent of area-level poverty. Multivariate modeling controlling for tract-level SES variables showed that cancer risk burdens increased by increasing levels of segregation for all racial groups combined and that this positive relationship was most pronounced for Hispanics, whites, and blacks. Separate modeling by source category showed similar results for mobile and area emission sources, but not for point sources, where persistent segregation gradients for the total population and for each racial group were not observed.

Previous analyses of the U.S. EPA's CEP and 1996 NATA data confirm the distribution of emissions source allocations for estimated cancer risk that are primarily driven by mobile sources (Apelberg et al. 2005; Morello-Frosch et al. 2000, 2001, 2002a, 2002b). Much of this difference in source contributions to estimated cancer risk for this study is driven by the overwhelming effect of diesel that is emitted by mobile sources. However, when diesel is removed from the analysis, mobile source emissions still account for 36% of estimated cancer risk. It is also possible that the difference in source contributions to estimated cancer risk is due to a lack of cancer potency information for those pollutants that tend to be released from stationary facilities (Morello-Frosch et al. 2000). The modeling results also confirm emerging evidence of racial disparities in exposure to air pollutants from mobile emission sources, including two studies in California examining traffic density and the demographic makeup of schools near major traffic corridors (Green et al. 2004; Gunier et al. 2003).

The segregation results in this study are consistent with those of one previous national study that examined the relationship between black/white residential segregation and ambient air toxics exposure in U.S. metropolitan areas using data from the U.S. EPA's CEP (Lopez 2002). Results showed that increased black/white segregation was associated with wider disparities in potential air toxics exposure, after controlling for a series of area-level SES measures. We used a different methodologic approach in our study in terms of how we measured segregation, derived area-level SES measures, and developed our statistical models, yet the consistency of results between these two segregation studies is noteworthy. To our knowledge, our analysis is the only study to use a generalized multiethnic segregation measure for the evaluation of environmental health disparities.

Apelberg et al. (2005) recently conducted an analysis of racial and socioeconomic disparities in cancer risk associated with air toxics in Maryland using the NATA data and found substantial risk disparities for on-road, area, and nonroad sources by socioeconomic measures such as income, homeownership, education, and disparities in exposures from on-road and area sources by race (measured as percent black residents in a tract). Racial disparities in cancer risk were strongest at the lowest income levels (Apelberg et al. 2005). In our national study, we found persistent racial disparities across income categories, but this may be the result of differences in methodology in the estimation of race-based risks or in the demographic makeup of the different study areas. Moreover, we concentrated on segregation rather than on the proportion of specific racial groups in census tracts. Indeed, most environmental inequality studies use measures of racial composition or the existence of census tracts with a high proportion of specific minority groups to assess potential disparities. This measure of tract-level racial composition is often interpreted as a measure of the magnitude of segregation in a metropolitan area. However, racial composition may not always be a true reflection of segregation per se, because segregation is a contextual measure that depends on the relationship between racial groups in neighborhoods (e.g., census tracts) across a larger geographic area (e.g., a metropolitan area). Thus, whereas percent minority measures reflect the composition of a particular neighborhood, they do not assess whether a metropolitan area's organization reflects broader patterns of racial inequality racial inequality Racial disparity Social medicine, public health
A disparity in opportunity for socioeconomic advancement or access to goods and services based solely on race. See Women and health.
. Indeed, our results indicate that segregation, when operationalized as a measure of metropolitan area evenness, is associated with a higher average cancer risk overall and that it also amplifies disparities across racial groups, suggesting that this regional measure of inequality functions independently of neighborhood or tract-level SES measures.

There are some inherent limitations to this analysis, particularly related to the use of the NATA data. First, the characterization of health risks posed by air toxics focuses on additive cancer risks but says nothing about how some of these substances may interact synergistically syn·er·gis·tic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to synergy: a synergistic effect.

2. Producing or capable of producing synergy: synergistic drugs.

3.
 with each other. Second, this analysis focuses on one route of potential exposure (inhalation through outdoor ambient exposures) and does not account for other exposure pathways through other media. Moreover, risk estimates do not take into account indoor and personal exposures to air toxics from other sources, such as consumer products, or the penetration of outdoor pollutants into indoor environments that can result in exposure levels that are significantly higher than estimated exposures from outdoor pollution sources. For example, ASPEN model estimates for volatile organic compounds volatile organic compound Environment Any toxic cabon-based (organic) substance that easily become vapors or gases–eg, solvents–paint thinners, lacquer thinner, degreasers, dry cleaning fluids  used for NATA were generally lower than measured personal exposures and the estimated cancer risks (Payne-Sturges et al. 2004). Moreover, a comparison of the modeled air quality estimates with geographically limited ambient air monitoring data throughout the country found that the modeled estimates for the handful of pollutants examined by the NATA were typically lower than the measured ambient annual average concentrations (U.S. EPA 2005b). Another potential source of uncertainty arises from the comparison of 1996 risk estimates with racial and socioeconomic measures from the 1990 Census. We chose to use the 1990 Census to avoid having to arbitrarily exclude individuals who did not self-identify exclusively into one racial category. In terms of changes in pollution distributions, although emissions are likely to have changed during this period because of regulatory efforts, it is also likely that certain emissions--particularly the proliferation of mobile sources and the steady increase in the average number of vehicle miles driven in certain regions--could be counteracting previous gains from tougher emission standards Emission standards are requirements that set specific limits to the amount of pollutants that can be released into the environment. Many emission standards focus on regulating pollutants released by automobiles (motor cars) and other powered vehicles but they can also regulate  from other sources (Apelberg et al. 2005).

Conclusion

Although the literature on segregation and health has expanded significantly in recent years, studies that specifically address segregation in the context of environmental health disparities are in their infancy. Communities concerned about environmental inequities have encouraged scientists, policy makers, and the regulatory community to consider the junctures of socioeconomic inequality, environmental protection, and public health. This study suggests that disparities in exposures to cancer risks associated with ambient air toxics are affected by the degree of racial residential segregation, and that these exposures may have environmental health significance for populations across racial/ethnic lines. Furthermore, the observed increase in cancer risk in more segregated urban areas is not modified by area-level poverty. Future research, incorporating new and better models of exposure, should include segregation as a key factor in the analysis. Moreover, although most research has focused on the health consequences of black/ white segregation in metropolitan areas, other minority groups may be similarly affected. Finally, examining segregation among metropolitan areas promotes a regional perspective for understanding the dynamics that shape environmental health disparities. The rationale for taking such a regional perspective is based on previous research that strongly suggests that it is more fruitful to assess potential drivers of environmental health disparities at the regional level because economic trends, transportation planning, and industrial clusters tend to be regional in nature, and zoning, siting, and urban planning urban planning: see city planning.
urban planning

Programs pursued as a means of improving the urban environment and achieving certain social and economic objectives.
 decisions tend to be local (Maantay 2002; Morello-Frosch 2002; Morello-Frosch et al. 2001). Therefore, future work that examines how health inequities play out across metropolitan areas could have implications for the development of localized interventions and policy initiatives that ameliorate a·mel·io·rate  
tr. & intr.v. a·me·lio·rat·ed, a·me·lio·rat·ing, a·me·lio·rates
To make or become better; improve. See Synonyms at improve.



[Alteration of meliorate.
 fundamental drivers of environmental inequities among diverse communities.

Received 14 July 2005; accepted 27 October 2005.

REFERENCES

Acevedo-Garcia D. 2001. Zip code-level risk factors for tuberculosis: neighborhood environment and residential segregation in New Jersey, 1985-1992. Am J Pubic pubic /pu·bic/ (pu´bik) pertaining to or situated near the pubes, the pubic bone, or the pubic region.

pu·bic
adj.
1.
 Health 91:734--741.

Acevedo-Garcia D, Lochner KA, Osypuk TL, Subramanian SV. 2003. Future directions in residential segregation and health research: a multilevel mul·ti·lev·el  
adj.
Having several levels: a multilevel parking garage.

Adj. 1. multilevel - of a building having more than one level
 approach. Am J Public Health 93:215-221.

Air Toxins "Hot Spots" Information and Assessment Act. 1987. California Health and Safety Code Section 44360 et seq et seq. (et seek) n. abbreviation for the Latin phrase et sequentes meaning "and the following." It is commonly used by lawyers to include numbered lists, pages or sections after the first number is stated, as in "the rules of the road are found in Vehicle Code . Available: http://www.oehha.cagov/air/chronic_rels/ HSC HSC - High Speed Connect 44300.htm [accessed 5 November 2004].

Apelberg BJ, Buckley TJ, White RH. 2005. Socioeconomic and racial disparities in cancer risk from air toxins in Maryland. Environ Health Perspect 113:693-699.

Burke LM. 1993. Race and environmental equity: a geographic analysis in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. . Geo Info Sys 3:44-50.

California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment. 2002. Hot Spot Unit Risk and Potency Values. Available: http://www.oehha.ca.gov/air/hot_spots/pdf/TSDlookup2002. pdf [accessed 5 November 2004].

Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. 1990. Public Law 101-549.

Collins CA, Williams DR. 1999. Segregation and mortality: the deadly effects of racism? Soc Forum 14:495-523.

Diez-Roux AV. 2003. Residential environments and cardiovascular risk. J Urban Health 80:569-589.

Farley R. 1977. Residential segregation in urbanized areas of the United States in 1970: an analysis of social class and racial differences. Demography demography (dĭmŏg`rəfē), science of human population. Demography represents a fundamental approach to the understanding of human society.  14:497-518.

Frey WH, Farley R. 1996. Latino, Asian, end black segregation in U.S. metropolitan areas: are multiethnic metros different? Demography 33:35-50.

Frumkin H. 2002. Urban sprawl and public health. Public Health Rep 117:201-217.

Frumkin H. 2003. Healthy places: exploring the evidence. Am J Public Health 93:1451-1456.

Gee GC, Payne-Sturges DC. 2004. Environmental health disparities: a framework integrating psychosocial psychosocial /psy·cho·so·cial/ (si?ko-so´shul) pertaining to or involving both psychic and social aspects.

psy·cho·so·cial
adj.
Involving aspects of both social and psychological behavior.
 and environmental concepts. Environ Health Perspect 112:1645-1653.

Green RS, Smorodinsky S, Kim JJ, McLaughlin R, Ostro B. 2004. Proximity of California public schools to busy roads. Environ Health Perspect 112:61-66.

Gunier RB, Hertz hertz (hûrts) [for Heinrich R. Hertz], abbr. Hz, unit of frequency, equal to 1 cycle per second. The term is combined with metric prefixes to denote multiple units such as the kilohertz (1,000 Hz), megahertz (1,000,000 Hz), and gigahertz  A, Von Behren J, Reynolds P. 2003. Traffic density in California: socioeconomic and ethnic differences among potentially exposed children. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol 13:240-246.

IARC. Diesel and Gasoline Engine gasoline engine: see internal-combustion engine.
gasoline engine

Most widely used form of internal-combustion engine, found in most automobiles and many other vehicles.
 Exhausts. Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer. Available: http://www-cie.iarc.fr/htdocs/monographs/vol46/46-01.htm [accessed 3 January 2005].

Iceland J. 2004. Beyond black and white: metropolitan residential segregation in multi-ethnic America. Sac Sci Res 33:248-271.

Jackson RJ. 2002. The impact of the built environment on health: an emerging field. Am J Public Health 93:1382-1384.

Kawachi I, Berkmen LF. 2003. Neighborhoods and Health. New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
:Oxford University Press.

Krieger N, Chert chert: see flint.  JT, Waterman PD, Soobader M-J, Subramanian SV, Carson R. 2003. Choosing area based socioeconomic measures to monitor social inequalities in low birth weight and childhood lead poisoning--the Public Health Disparities Geocoding Project (US). J Epidemiol Community Health 57:186-199.

LaVeist TA. 1989. Linking residential segregation to the infant-mortality race disparity in United-States cities. Sociol Son Res 73:90-94.

LeVeist TA. 1992. The political empowerment and health status of African Americans: mapping a new territory. Am J Sociol 97:1080-1095.

LaVeist TA. 1993. Segregation, poverty, and empowerment: health consequences for African Americans. Milbank Q 71:41-64.

Logan JR. 1978. Growth, politics and the stratification of places. Am J Socio 184:404-416.

Logan JR, Molotch HL. 1987. Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place. Berkeley: University of California Press "UC Press" redirects here, but this is also an abbreviation for University of Chicago Press

University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing.
.

Lopez R. 2002. Segregation end black/white differences in exposure to air toxins in 1990. Environ Health Perspect 110(suppl 2):289-295.

Maantay J. 2002. Zoning law, health, and environmental justice: what's the connection? J Law Mad Ethics 30:572-593.

Massey DS. 2004. Segregation and stratification: a biosocial bi·o·so·cial  
adj.
Of or having to do with the interaction of biological and social forces: the biosocial aspects of disease.



bi
 perspective. Du Bois Du Bois (d`bois, dəbois`), city (1990 pop. 8,286), Clearfield co., W central Pa., in the region of the Allegheny plateau; inc. 1881.  Rev 1:7-25.

Massey DS, Denton NA. 1988. The dimensions of residential segregation. Soc Forces 67:281-315.

Massey DS, Denton NA. 1989. Hypersegregation in U.S. metropolitan areas: black and Hispanic segregation along five dimensions. Demography 26:373-391.

Massey DS, Fischer MJ. 2000. How segregation concentrates poverty. Ethn Racial Stud 23:670-691.

Massey DS, Fong E. 1990. Segregation and neighborhood quality: blacks, Hispanics, and Asians in the San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden  metropolitan area. Soc Forces 69:15-32.

Massey DS, Gross AB, Eggers Eggers may refer to:
  • Dave Eggers - an American writer and editor
  • Eggers Industries - Neenah, WI Door Manufacturer
  • Eggers Island - an island of Greenland
  • Eggers - a character portrayed in Sealab 2021
  • Captain Reinhold Eggers - Colditz security chief.
 ML. 1991. Segregation, the concentration of poverty, and the life chances of individuals. Soc Sci Res 20:397-420.

Massey DS, White MJ, Voon-Chin P. 1996. The dimensions of segregation revisited. Sociol Methods Res 25:172-206.

Merello-Frosch RA. 2002. Discrimination and the political economy of environmental inequality. Environ Plann C Gov Policy 20:477-496.

Morello-Frosch R, Pastor M, Porras C, Sadd J. 2002a. Environmental justice and regional inequality in Southern California: implications for future research. Environ Health Perspect 110(suppl 2):149-154.

Morello-Frosch RA, Pastor M, Sadd J. 2001. Environmental justice and southern California's "riskscape": the distribution of air toxins exposures and health risks among diverse communities. Urban Aft Rev 36:551-578.

Morello-Frosch RA, Pastor M, Sadd J. 2002b. Integrating environmental justice and the precautionary principle The precautionary principle is a moral and political principle which states that if an action or policy might cause severe or irreversible harm to the public, in the absence of a scientific consensus that harm would not ensue, the burden of proof falls on those who would advocate  in research end policy-making pol·i·cy·mak·ing or pol·i·cy-mak·ing  
n.
High-level development of policy, especially official government policy.

adj.
Of, relating to, or involving the making of high-level policy:
: the case of ambient air toxins exposures and health risks among school children in Los Angeles. Ann Am Acad Pol Soc Sci 584:47-68.

Morelle-Frosch RA, Woodruff TJ, Axelrad DA, Celdwell JC. 2000. Air toxins and health risks in California: the public health implications of outdoor concentrations. Risk Anal 20:273-291.

Morland K, Wing S, Diez Roux Roux , Pierre Paul Émile 1853-1933.

French bacteriologist. His work with the diphtheria bacillus led to the development of antitoxins to neutralize pathogenic toxins.
 A, Poole C. 2002. Neighborhood characteristics associated with the location of food stores and food service places. Am J Prey Med 22:23-29.

Northridge ME, Sclar ED, Biswas P. 2003. Sorting out the connections between the built environment and health: a conceptual framework for navigating pathways and planning healthy cities. J Urban Health 80:556-568.

OEHHA. 2003. The Air Toxics Hot Spots Program Guidance Manual for Preparation of Health Risk Assessments. Oakland, CA:Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, California Environmental Protection Agency.

OEHHA. 2005. Chemicals Known to the State to Cause Cancer or Reproductive Toxicity reproductive toxicity Any adverse effect attributable to exposure to a chemical, directed against the reproductive and/or related endocrine systems Adverse effects Altered sexual behavior, fertility, pregnancy outcomes, or modifications in other functions that . Oakland, CA:Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, California Environmental Protection Agency. Available: http://www.oehha.ca.gov! prop65/prop65_list/files/P65singla052705.pdf [accessed 5 May 2005].

Pastor M, Sadd J, Hipp J. 2001. Which came first? Toxic facilities, minority move-in, and environmental justice. J Urban Aff 23:1-21.

Pastor M, Sadd J, Morello-Frosch RA. 2002. Who's minding the kids? Pollution, public schools, and environmental justice in Los Angeles. Soc Sci Q 83:263-280.

Pastor M, Sadd J, Morello-Frosch HA. 2004. Reading, writing and toxins: children's health Children's Health Definition

Children's health encompasses the physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being of children from infancy through adolescence.
, academic performance, and environmental justice in Los Angeles. Environ Plann C Gov Policy 22:271-290.

Payne-Sturges DC, Burke TA, Breysse P, Diener-Wast M, Buckley TJ. 2004. Personal exposure meets risk assessment: a comparison of measured and modeled exposures and risks in an urban community. Environ Health Perspect 112:589-599.

Peet R. 1984. Class struggle, the relocation of employment, and economic crisis. Sci Soc 48:38-51.

Perlin SA, Setzer RW, Creason J, Sexton sex·ton  
n.
An employee or officer of a church who is responsible for the care and upkeep of church property and sometimes for ringing bells and digging graves.
 K. 1995. Distribution of industrial air emissions by income and race in the United States Racial demographics

Main article: Racial demographics of the United States


The United States is a diverse country racially. It has a majority of persons of White/European ancestry spread throughout the country.
: an approach using the Toxins Release Inventory. Environ Sci Technot 29:69-80.

Perlin SA, Sexton K, Wong DW. 1999. An examination of race and poverty for populations living near industrial sources of air pollution. J Expo Anal Environ Epidemial 9:29-48.

Perlin SA, Wong DW, Sexton K. 2001. Residential proximity to industrial sources of air pollution: interrelationships among race, poverty and age. J Air Waste Maneg Asses 51:406-421.

Polednak AP. 1991. Black-white differences in infant mortality in 38 standard metropolitan statistical areas. Am J Public Health 81:1480-1482.

Polednak AP. 1993. Poverty, residential segregation, and black]white mortality ratio in urban areas. J Health Care Poor Underserved 4:363-373.

Polednak AP. 1996a. Segregation, discrimination and mortality in U.S. blacks. Ethn Dis 6:99-107.

Polednak AP. 1996b. Trends in U.S. urban black infant mortality, by degree of residential segregation. Am J Public Health 86:723-726.

Polednak AP. 1997. Segregation, Poverty, and Mortality in Urban African Americans. New York:Oxford University Press.

Pulido L. 1994. Restructuring and the contraction and expansion of environmental rights in the United States. Environ Plan A 26:915-936.

Pulido L. 2000. Rethinking environmental racism Environmental racism is intentional or unintentional racial discrimination in the enforcement of environmental rules and regulations, the intentional or unintentional targeting of minority communities for the siting of polluting industries such as toxic waste disposal, or the : white privilege White privilege has the following meanings:
  • White privilege (sociology) -- social privileges argued to be enjoyed by whites.
  • White privilege (royalty) -- better known as "privilège du blanc", a clothing protocol in the Vatican.
 and urban development in southern California. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 90:12-40.

Pulido L, Sidawi S, Vos RO. 1996. An archaeology of environmental racism in Los Angeles. Urban Geogr 17:419-439.

Reynolds P, Van Behren J, Gunier RB, Goldberg DE, Hertz A, Smith D. 2002. Traffic patterns and childhood cancer incidence rates in California, United States. Cancer Causes Control 13:665-673.

Rosenbaum AS, Axelrad DA, Woodruff TJ, Wei YH, Ligocki MP, Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
 JP. 1999. National estimates of outdoor air toxins concentrations. J Air Waste Manag Asses 49:1138-1152.

Sadd JL, Pastor M, Boer JT, Snyder LD. 1999. "Every breath you take ...': the demographics The attributes of people in a particular geographic area. Used for marketing purposes, population, ethnic origins, religion, spoken language, income and age range are examples of demographic data.  of toxic releases in southern California. Econ Dev Q 13:107-123.

Sakoda JM. 1981. A generalized index of dissimilarity The index of dissimilarity is a demographic measure of the evenness with which two groups are distributed across the component geographic areas that make up a larger area. The index score can also be interpreted as the percentage of one of the two groups included in the calculation . Demography 18:245-250.

Schultz AJ, Williams DR, Israel BA, Lempert LB. 2002. Racial and spatial relations Noun 1. spatial relation - the spatial property of a place where or way in which something is situated; "the position of the hands on the clock"; "he specified the spatial relations of every piece of furniture on the stage"
position
 as fundamental determinants of health in Detroit. Milbank Q 80:677-707.

Shenassa ED, Stubbendick A, Brown MJ. 2004. Social disparities in housing and related pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.

pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics.
 injury: a multilevel study. Am J Public Health 94:633-639.

Sinton P. 1997. Fewer blacks, Latinos get loans. San Francisco Chronicle The San Francisco Chronicle was founded in 1865 as The Daily Dramatic Chronicle by teenage brothers Charles de Young and Michael H. de Young.[2] The paper grew along with San Francisco to become the largest circulation newspaper on the West Coast of the , 18 September: D1, D10.

Townsend P, Phillimore P, Beattie A. 1988. Health and Deprivation: Inequality and the North. London:Croom Helm. Transportation and Land Use Coalition. 2002. Roadblocks to Health: Transportation Barriers to Healthy Communities. Oakland, CA:Transportation and Land Use Coalition, People United for a Better Oakland, Center for Third World Organizing.

U.S. Census Bureau. 1991. Census of Population and Housing, 1990 [United States]: Summary Tape File 1A. Washington, DC:U.S. Census Bureau. Available: http://webapp.icpsr. umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/09575.xml [accessed 6 February 2004).

U.S. Census Bureau. 1993. Census of Population and Housing, 1990 [United States]: Summary Tape File 3A. Washington, DC:U.S. Census Bureau. Available: http://webapp.icpsr. umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/09782.xml [accessed 6 February 2004].

U.S. Census Bureau. 1994. Geographic Areas Reference Manual. Washington, DC:Census Bureau.

U.S. Census Bureau. 1998 USA Counties 1998 Washington, DC:Census Bureau. Available: http://censtats.census.gov/ usa/usa.shtm] [accessed 1 August 2004].

U.S. Census Bureau. 2004. USA Statistics in Brief. Washington, DC:Census Bureau. Available: http://www.census.gev/ statab/www/brief.html [accessed 6 February 2004].

U.S. EPA. 2003. Draft Final Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment. Washington, DC:U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

U.S. EPA. 2005a. National Air Toxins Assessment. Washington, DC:U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Available: http:// www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/neta/[accessed 4 January 2005].

U.S. EPA. 2005b. Comparison of ASPEN Modeling System Results to Monitored Concentrations. Washington, DC:U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Available: http://www. epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata/draft6.html [accessed 21 May 2005].

Walker R. 1985. Class, division of labour and employment in space. In: Social Relations and Spatial Structures (Gregory D, Urry J, ads). London:Macmillan, 164-189.

Wallace D. Wallace R. 1998. A Plague on Your Houses: How New York Was Burned Down and National Public Health Crumbled crum·ble  
v. crum·bled, crum·bling, crum·bles

v.tr.
To break into small fragments or particles.

v.intr.
1. To fall into small fragments or particles; disintegrate.
. New York:Verso ver·so  
n. pl. ver·sos
1. A left-hand page of a book or the reverse side of a leaf, as opposed to the recto.

2. The back of a coin or medal.
.

Wallace R. 1988. A synergism synergism /syn·er·gism/ (sin´er-jizm) synergy.

syn·er·gism
n.
Synergy.


synergism
 of plagues: "planned shrinkage Planned shrinkage is a policy of withdrawing essential city services (such as police patrols, garbage removal, street repairs, and fire services) from neighborhoods suffering from urban decay, crime and poverty so that neighborhoods may be claimed by outside interests for new ," contagious contagious /con·ta·gious/ (-jus) capable of being transmitted from one individual to another, as a contagious disease; communicable.

con·ta·gious
adj.
1. Of or relating to contagion.
 housing destruction and AIDS in the Bronx. Environ Res 47:1-33.

Wallace R. 1990. Urban desertification desertification

Spread of a desert environment into arid or semiarid regions, caused by climatic changes, human influence, or both. Climatic factors include periods of temporary but severe drought and long-term climatic changes toward dryness.
, public health and public order: "planned shrinkage," violent death, substance abuse and AIDS in the Bronx. Sac Sci Mad 31:801-813.

Williams DR, Collins C. 2001. Racial residential segregation: a fundamental cause of racial disparities in health. Public Health Rep 116:404-416.

Williams DR, Collins C. 2004. Reparations reparations, payments or other compensation offered as an indemnity for loss or damage. Although the term is used to cover payments made to Holocaust survivors and to Japanese Americans interned during World War II in so-called relocation camps (and used as well to : a viable strategy to address the enigma of African American health. Am Behav Sci 47:977-1000.

Wilson WJ. 1996. When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor. New York:Alfred A. Knopf.

Woodruff TJ, Axelrad DA, Caldwell J, Morello-Frosch R, Rosenbaum A. 1998. Public health implications of 1990 air toxins concentrations across the United States. Environ Health Perspect 106:245-251.

Rachel Morello-Frosch (1,2) and Bill M. Jesdale (1)

(1) Department of Community Health, School of Medicine, and (2) Center for Environmental Studies, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island

“Providence” redirects here. For other uses, see Providence (disambiguation).
Providence is the capital and the most populous city of the U.S.
, USA

Address correspondence to R. Morello-Frosch, Brown University, Center for Environmental Studies and Department of Community Health, School of Medicine, 135 Angell St., Box 1943, Providence, RI 02912-1943 USA. Telephone: (401) 863-9429. Fax: (401) 863-3503. E-mail: rmf@brown.edu

We thank E. Shenassa and M. Pastor for their early feedback on this work.

This research was supported by a Salomon Research Award from Brown University.

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.
Table 1. Distribution of estimated cancer risks in continental U.S.
metropolitan areas, per million.

                             5th       Interquartile      95th
                  Mean    percentile       range       percentile

All sources       631.9     129.3       272.4-696.5      1619.1
Background         23.0      23.0        23.0-23.0         23.0
Point (major)
  sources           7.9       0.1         0.6-6.2          26.3
Area sources       43.3       5.4        13.3-50.9        135.6
Mobile sources    557.6      94.8       223.9-605.7      1465.8
On-road mobile
  sources         178.5      39.3        90.9-227.9       422.8
Nonroad mobile
  sources         379.2      48.7       122.1-368.4      1097.8

Table 2. Distribution of estimated cancer risks in continental U.S.
metropolitan areas (excluding diesel particulate matter), per million.

                             5th       Interquartile      95th
                  Mean    percentile       range       percentile

All sources       115.5      37.7       61.0-137.9       277.0
Background         23.0      23.0       23.0-23.0         23.0
Point (major)
  sources           7.9       0.1        0.6-6.2          26.3
Area sources       43.3       5.4       13.3-50.9        135.6
Mobile sources     41.3       6.7       18.7-51.2        102.9
On-road mobile
  sources          25.4       4.4       12.3-33.3         61.2
Nonroad mobile
  sources          15.9       1.8        5.6-17.5         44.7

Table 3. Distribution of racial/ethnic groups by level of
metropolitan area segregation.

                                       Total (n)

Metropolitan areas                            309
Census tracts                              45,710
National                              196,848,140
  Hispanics of all races               20,386,166
  Non-Hispanic whites                 144,397,690
  Non-Hispanic blacks                  24,873,268
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    894,954
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                           6,069,605
Western states                         34,819,823
  Hispanics of all races                7,756,347
  Non-Hispanic whites                  21,565,910
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   2,256,761
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    233,259
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                           2,947,432
Southern states                        39,028,191
  Hispanics of all races                1,983,575
  Non-Hispanic whites                  28,404,970
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   7,995,229
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    110,127
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                             514,659
Mountains and plains states            10,125,466
  Hispanics of all races                  685,376
  Non-Hispanic whites                   8,507,657
  Non-Hispanic blacks                     565,269
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    174,238
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
   Islanders                              184,341
Border states                          18,113,094
  Hispanics of all races                4,620,933
  Non-Hispanic whites                  11,126,767
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   1,853,246
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    135,802
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                             351,491
Midwestern states                      43,620,713
  Hispanics of all races                1,475,572
  Non-Hispanic whites                  35,856,980
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   5,463,371
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    138,166
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                             656,826
Northeastern states                    51,140,853
  Hispanics of all races                3,864,361
  Non-Hispanic whites                  38,935,406
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   6,739,392
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                    103,362
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                           1,414,856

                                             Segregation [Dm (%)]

                                     Low and       High       Extreme
                                     moderate
                                     0.16-0.39   0.40-0.59   0.60-0.82

Metropolitan areas                      25          53          21
Census tracts                           10          50          40
National                                11          52          37
  Hispanics of all races                13          66          21
  Non-Hispanic whites                   12          51          37
  Non-Hispanic blacks                    5          45          50
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                  21          60          19
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                           12          64          24
Western states                          33          67          --
  Hispanics of all races                20          80          --
  Non-Hispanic whites                   42          58          --
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   21          79          --
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                  50          50          --
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                           18          82          --
Southern states                          5          71          24
  Hispanics of all races                 2          89           9
  Non-Hispanic whites                    5          72          23
  Non-Hispanic blacks                    5          63          32
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                  10          72          18
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                            5          74          20
Mountains and plains states             44          45          11
  Hispanics of all races                51          43           5
  Non-Hispanic whites                   44          44          12
  Non-Hispanic blacks                   26          54          19
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                  26          71           3
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
   Islanders                            52          40           8
Border states                            9          89           2
  Hispanics of all races                14          85           0
  Non-Hispanic whites                    7          91           2
  Non-Hispanic blacks                    5          90           5
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                   4          95           1
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                            4          94           2
Midwestern states                        3          26          72
  Hispanics of all races                 1          12          87
  Non-Hispanic whites                    3          29          68
  Non-Hispanic blacks                    1          10          90
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                   4          41          55
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                            3          25          72
Northeastern states                      1          40          59
  Hispanics of all races                 0          29          70
  Non-Hispanic whites                    2          43          56
  Non-Hispanic blacks                    0          29          71
  Non-Hispanic American Indians
    and Alaska Natives                   3          35          63
  Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific
    Islanders                            0          38          61

Table 4. Relative estimated lifetime cancer incidence
associated with ambient air toxics [RCR (95% CI)],
continental U.S. metropolitan areas. (a)

                            Highly segregated    Extremely segregated

Total population             1.73 (1.69-1.77)      2.63 (2.57-2.10)
Non-Hispanic whites          1.55 (1.51-1.60)      2.19 (2.13-2.25)
Non-Hispanic blacks          1.90 (1.71-2.10)      3.18 (2.86-3.52)
Hispanics (all races)        2.44 (2.27-2.63)      6.40 (5.94-6.89)
Non-Hispanic American
  Indians and Alaska
  Natives                    1.39 (1.05-1.85)      2.51 (1.85-3.39)
Non-Hispanic Asians and
  Pacific Islanders          2.25 (1.99-2.55)      3.90 (3.43-4.42)

CI, confidence interval. [R.sup.2] = 5%.

(a) Unadjusted estimates.

Table 5. Relative estimated lifetime cancer incidence associated
with ambient air toxics [RCR (95% CI)], continental U.S.
metropolitan areas. (a)

                            Highly segregated    Extremely segregated

Total population             1.04 (1.01-1.07)      1.32 (1.28-1.36)
Non-Hispanic whites          1.04 (1.01-1.08)      1.28 (1.24-1.33)
Non-Hispanic blacks          1.09(0.98-1.21)        1.38(1.24-1.53)
Hispanics (all races)        1.09 (1.01-1.17)      1.74 (1.61-1.88)
Non-Hispanic American
  Indians and Alaska
  Natives                    1.02 (0.77-1.35)      1.21 (0.90-1.64)
Non-Hispanic Asians and
  Pacific Islanders          1.10 (0.97-1.24)      1.32 (1.16-1.51)

CI, confidence interval. [R.sup.2] = 38%.

(a) Adjusted for state regional grouping; metropolitan area
population size; county voter turnout; census-tract population
density, poverty rate, and material deprivation.
COPYRIGHT 2006 National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Research
Author:Jesdale, Bill M.
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Mar 1, 2006
Words:9714
Previous Article:First experimental demonstration of the multipotential carcinogenic effects of aspartame administered in the feed to Sprague-Dawley...
Next Article:Distinct gene expression profiles in immortalized human urothelial cells exposed to inorganic arsenite and its methylated trivalent...
Topics:



Related Articles
Cancer incidence and community exposure to air emissions from petroleum and chemical plants in Contra Costa County, California: a critical...
ARCTIC TOXINS A CONCERN.(Brief Article)
Prenatal PAH exposure causes genetic changes in newborns.(Chromosomal Damage)
Wisconsin's environmental public health tracking network: information systems design for childhood cancer surveillance.(Public Health Tracking /...
Parents should know what their children are breathing.(Commentary)
EPA finalizes amendments to air toxics regulations for plywood and composite wood products.(TRENDS & NEWS)
The cancer differential: minorities in racially segregated urban areas at higher risk than whites.(Environews: Science Selections)
A backpack's worth of data: elevated teen cancer risks linked to air pollution.(Science Selections)
A cancer risk assessment of inner-city teenagers living in New York City and Los Angeles.(Children's Health)
Nanoparticles: health effects--pros and cons.(Review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles