Publication | Open Access
Intersectional inequalities in industrial air toxics exposure in the United States
32
Citations
55
References
2022
Year
Urban HealthAir QualityHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthUnited StatesEnvironmental ExposureEnvironmental HealthToxicologyPublic HealthReveal Stark InequalitiesPopulation ExposureHuman ExposureUs Census TractsEnvironmental JusticeIntersectional InequalitiesSociologySocio-environmental ImplicationUnequal ExposureEnvironmental ToxicologyAir PollutionMedicinePollution
Environmental justice and health research demonstrate unequal exposure to environmental hazards at the neighborhood-level. We use an innovative method-eco-intersectional multilevel (EIM) modeling-to assess intersectional inequalities in industrial air toxics exposure across US census tracts in 2014. Results reveal stark inequalities in exposure across analytic strata, with a 45-fold difference in average exposure between most and least exposed. Low SES, multiply marginalized (high % Black, high % female-headed households) urban communities experienced highest risk. These inequalities were not described by additive effects alone, necessitating the use of interaction terms. We advance a critical intersectional approach to evaluating environmental injustices.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1