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Poverty, Residential Segregation, and Black/White Mortality Ratios in Urban Areas
88
Citations
17
References
1993
Year
Residential PatternsUrban HealthRegional DisparitiesHealth DisparitiesMortality RatesSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesSocial SciencesUrban SocietyAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenPovertyHealth DisparityPublic HealthRacial EquityHousingDemographic ChangeRacial JusticeDisadvantaged BackgroundBlack/white Mortality RatiosEpidemiologyUrban GeographyPopulation InequalitySociologySocial EpidemiologySpatial DemographyDemographyAge-standardized Death Rate
Researchers speculate that in addition to poverty, residential patterns may contribute to black/white differences in mortality rates. But few have assessed the relationship. This study reports considerable variation in the black/white ratio of age-specific all-cause mortality rates (ages 15-24 to 65-74 years) from 1982 to 1986 among the 38 U.S. Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (SMSAs) with populations greater than one million in 1980. The black/white poverty-rate ratio for each SMSA was a stronger predictor of variation in the black/white mortality ratio for men than for women. For both men and women age 15-44, the level of black/white residential segregation was a significant (positive) predictor of the black/white ratio of the age-standardized death rate. This analysis also identifies SMSAs containing geographic areas with unusually high or low black/white mortality ratios, and indicates the need for more-detailed studies of explanations for such variation.
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