Associations between Rat Infestations and Mental Health Vary by Gender, Race, and Income in Chicago

Maureen H. Murray, Kaylee A. Byers, Jacqueline Y. Buckley, Seth B. Magle, Danielle German
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Abstract

Rats are an understudied stressor for people in urban environments around the world but the effects may not be distributed equally among residents. In this study, we examined associations between residential rat sightings and mental health in Chicago, where rat complaints are the highest of any American city. We examined how this relationship varied by frequency of rat sightings, race, ethnicity, income, home ownership, and gender and explored potential psychosocial pathways (e.g., feelings about the home) between rat sightings and mental distress. We conducted a randomized household survey along an income gradient in 2021 and asked about depressive symptoms in the past week (i.e., Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale), frequency of rat sightings in/around the home, perceptions of rats, neighborhood conditions, and socio-demographic characteristics. We used logistic regression to assess relationships among these variables for our entire sample and for specific demographics using stratified models. Respondents (n = 589; 409 complete cases) who saw rats in/around the home daily/almost daily had 5.5 times higher odds of reporting high depressive symptoms relative to respondents who saw rats less frequently after accounting for socio-demographics and neighborhood conditions. This relationship was significant for men and respondents with lower incomes or race or ethnicity other than white. Our results show that rat infestations should be considered a threat to mental health among urban residents. Increased mental health support for residents living in rat-infested housing may improve public health in cities.

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芝加哥鼠患与心理健康之间的关系因性别、种族和收入而异
老鼠是世界各地城市环境中一种未被充分研究的压力源,但其对居民的影响可能并不平均。在这项研究中,我们考察了芝加哥居民的老鼠目击事件与心理健康之间的关系,芝加哥是美国所有城市中老鼠投诉最多的城市。我们研究了这种关系在老鼠出没频率、种族、民族、收入、房屋所有权和性别方面的差异,并探索了老鼠出没和精神痛苦之间潜在的社会心理途径(如对房屋的感受)。我们在 2021 年沿收入梯度进行了随机家庭调查,并询问了过去一周的抑郁症状(即流行病学研究中心抑郁量表)、在家中/周围发现老鼠的频率、对老鼠的看法、邻里条件和社会人口特征。我们使用逻辑回归法对整个样本和特定人口统计学特征的分层模型评估了这些变量之间的关系。在考虑了社会人口特征和邻里条件后,每天/几乎每天都在家中/周围看到老鼠的受访者(n = 589;409 个完整病例)与不太经常看到老鼠的受访者相比,报告抑郁症状严重的几率高出 5.5 倍。对于男性和收入较低、非白人种族或民族的受访者来说,这种关系非常明显。我们的研究结果表明,鼠害应被视为对城市居民心理健康的一种威胁。为居住在鼠患区的居民提供更多的心理健康支持可能会改善城市的公共健康状况。
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