美国的种族、历史上的红线和当代交通噪音差异。

IF 4.1 3区 医学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology Pub Date : 2024-05-17 DOI:10.1038/s41370-024-00682-x
Timothy W Collins, Sara E Grineski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:歧视性联邦住房做法的遗留问题--如房屋所有者贷款公司(HOLC)的种族化财产评估和联邦住房管理局的制度化红线--包括当今环境健康结果的差异。噪音污染会损害健康,但只有一项研究将当代噪音与美国一些城市的房屋所有者贷款公司(HOLC)红线制度联系起来,而两项全国性研究发现,社区中有色人种比例较高与噪音增加之间存在联系。目前还没有研究对所有 HOLC 地图城市的噪声污染暴露差异进行调查,也没有研究基于种族/族裔和红线的交叉点进行调查:我们的目标有三个:(1)在所有 HOLC 地图绘制城市中,根据历史上的红线状态,评估每人在交通噪声暴露方面的细微差别。(2) 量化全国范围内按种族/族裔划分的噪声暴露差异。(3) 探索红线状态与种族/族裔在噪声暴露方面的相互作用:我们分析了三个数据源:(方法:我们分析了三个数据源:(1)完整的 HOLC 数字地图,其中包含有序的投资风险等级(A-D);(2)精细尺度(30 米)的交通噪声水平估计值(2020 年);(3)2020 年人口普查区块中个人的社会人口特征:我们发现过量交通噪声与 HOLC 等级之间存在近似单调的联系,A 级(等级最高)和 D 级(等级最低)社区的当代居民之间的暴露量明显增加(17.4 分贝或 3 倍响度),这种模式在 HOLC 地图绘制的城市中是一致的。在全国范围内,有色人种受到的超标交通噪音暴露比白人高出约 7 分贝(2 倍音量),这种模式在美国各县都是一致的。按 HOLC 等级划分的噪声暴露差距比按种族/族裔划分的差距更大。然而,在每个 HOLC 等级中,当代种族/族裔噪声暴露差距持续存在,其水平接近于未分级地区的差距,这表明历史上的红线是造成当代全国声景不公正的多种歧视性做法之一:研究结果表明,历史上的红线和美国社会中更广泛的种族不平等是如何在全国范围内形成环境不公正的:过量的噪音会损害人类健康。在美国,有色人种社区受到的噪声暴露不尽相同,尽管以往的研究因依赖综合数据而受到限制。他们还不成比例地集中在历史上被划为红线的地区。红线区的遗留问题包括持续存在的种族和经济不平等以及环境健康差异。在此,我们首次在全国范围内对当代噪声污染与历史上的 "重划区 "和种族/族裔之间的差异进行了全面研究。研究结果加深了人们对基于种族的噪声污染暴露差异的历史根源和持久显著性的理解,并可为通过噪声污染政策制定来解决这些差异提供参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Race, historical redlining, and contemporary transportation noise disparities in the United States.

Background: Legacies of discriminatory federal housing practices-e.g., racialized property appraisal by the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) and institutionalized redlining by the Federal Housing Administration-include disparate present-day environmental health outcomes. Noise pollution is health-harming, but just one study has associated contemporary noise with redlining in some HOLC-mapped United States (US) cities, while two national studies found associations between greater neighborhood-level people of color composition and increased noise. No studies have examined noise pollution exposure disparities across all HOLC-mapped cities or based on the intersection of race/ethnicity and redlining.

Objective: We address three objectives: (1) Assess disparities in fine-scale, per person transportation noise exposures by historical redlining status across all HOLC-mapped cities. (2) Quantify disparities in noise exposures by race/ethnicity nationwide. (3) Explore interactions between redlining status and race/ethnicity in noise exposures.

Methods: We analyzed three data sources: (1) complete digital HOLC maps of ordered investment risk grades (A-D), (2) fine-scale (30 m) estimates of transportation noise levels (year-2020), and (3) sociodemographic characteristics of individuals in year-2020 census blocks.

Results: We find an approximately monotonic association for excess transportation noise with HOLC grade, marked by a pronounced exposure increase (17.4 dBA or 3× loudness) between contemporary residents of grade A (highest-graded) and D (lowest-graded) neighborhoods, a pattern consistent across HOLC-mapped cities. People of color experience ~7 dBA greater (2× louder) excess transportation noise exposures than White people nationwide, a pattern consistent across US counties. Noise exposure disparities are larger by HOLC grade than by race/ethnicity. However, contemporary racial/ethnic noise exposure disparities persist within each HOLC grade at levels approximating those disparities existing in ungraded areas, indicating that historical redlining is one of multiple discriminatory practices shaping contemporary national soundscape injustices.

Significance: Findings illustrate how historical redlining and broader racialized inequalities in US society have shaped environmental injustices nationwide.

Impact statement: Excessive noise exposures harm human health. Communities of color in the United States experience disparate noise exposures, although previous studies are limited by reliance upon aggregated data. They are also disproportionately concentrated in historically redlined areas. Legacies of redlining include persistent racial and economic inequalities and environmental health disparities. Here, we conduct the first complete national examination of contemporary noise pollution disparities with respect to historical redlining and race/ethnicity. Findings advance understanding of the historical roots and enduring salience of race-based disparities in noise pollution exposures and can inform efforts to address these disparities through noise pollution policy-making.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
93
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology (JESEE) aims to be the premier and authoritative source of information on advances in exposure science for professionals in a wide range of environmental and public health disciplines. JESEE publishes original peer-reviewed research presenting significant advances in exposure science and exposure analysis, including development and application of the latest technologies for measuring exposures, and innovative computational approaches for translating novel data streams to characterize and predict exposures. The types of papers published in the research section of JESEE are original research articles, translation studies, and correspondence. Reported results should further understanding of the relationship between environmental exposure and human health, describe evaluated novel exposure science tools, or demonstrate potential of exposure science to enable decisions and actions that promote and protect human health.
期刊最新文献
Additive effect of high transportation noise exposure and socioeconomic deprivation on stress-associated neural activity, atherosclerotic inflammation, and cardiovascular disease events. Air pollution mixture exposure during pregnancy and postpartum psychological functioning: racial/ethnic- and fetal sex-specific associations. Prenatal ozone exposure and risk of intellectual disability. Assessment of long-term exposure to traffic-related air pollution: An exposure framework. Environmental public health research at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: A blueprint for exposure science in a connected world.
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