期刊名称:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
印刷版ISSN:0027-8424
电子版ISSN:1091-6490
出版年度:2022
卷号:119
期号:34
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2117868119
语种:English
出版社:The National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
摘要:Significance
Racial residential segregation (RRS) – defined here as the geographic separation of Black individuals and communities from other racial/ethnic groups into separate, unequal neighborhoods – fosters environments inimical to health through disinvestment of resources and concentration of disadvantages. Neighborhood environments influence children’s health and development, but relationships between RRS and cognitive development are poorly understood. We find that: (1) non-Hispanic Black children were more likely to experience multiple adverse exposures in early childhood, and (2) among non-Hispanic Black children, high levels of RRS augmented the detrimental effect of elevated blood levels on reading test scores. Non-linear models were used to model exposure to lead and RRS, and their interaction.
Racial/ethnic disparities in academic performance may result from a confluence of adverse exposures that arise from structural racism and accrue to specific subpopulations. This study investigates childhood lead exposure, racial residential segregation, and early educational outcomes. Geocoded North Carolina birth data is linked to blood lead surveillance data and fourth-grade standardized test scores (n = 25,699). We constructed a census tract-level measure of racial isolation (RI) of the non-Hispanic Black (NHB) population. We fit generalized additive models of reading and mathematics test scores regressed on individual-level blood lead level (BLL) and neighborhood RI of NHB (RINHB). Models included an interaction term between BLL and RINHB. BLL and RINHB were associated with lower reading scores; among NHB children, an interaction was observed between BLL and RINHB. Reading scores for NHB children with BLLs of 1 to 3 µg/dL were similar across the range of RINHB values. For NHB children with BLLs of 4 µg/dL, reading scores were similar to those of NHB children with BLLs of 1 to 3 µg/dL at lower RINHB values (less racial isolation/segregation). At higher RINHB levels (greater racial isolation/segregation), children with BLLs of 4 µg/dL had lower reading scores than children with BLLs of 1 to 3 µg/dL. This pattern becomes more marked at higher BLLs. Higher BLL was associated with lower mathematics test scores among NHB and non-Hispanic White (NHW) children, but there was no evidence of an interaction. In conclusion, NHB children with high BLLs residing in high RINHB neighborhoods had worse reading scores.
关键词:enracial residential segregationcognitive outcomeslead exposurestandardized test scores