The long shadow of residential racial segregation: Associations between childhood residential segregation trajectories and young adult health among Black US Americans

Residential racial segregation is a key manifestation of anti-Black structural racism, thought to be a fundamental cause of poor health; evidence has shown that it yields neighborhood disinvestment, institutional discrimination, and targeting of unhealthy products like tobacco and alcohol. Yet resea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health & place 2022-09, Vol.77, p.102904-102904, Article 102904
Hauptverfasser: Schwartz, Gabriel L., Wang, Guangyi, Kershaw, Kiarri N., McGowan, Cyanna, Kim, Min Hee, Hamad, Rita
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Residential racial segregation is a key manifestation of anti-Black structural racism, thought to be a fundamental cause of poor health; evidence has shown that it yields neighborhood disinvestment, institutional discrimination, and targeting of unhealthy products like tobacco and alcohol. Yet research on the long-term impacts of childhood exposure to residential racial segregation is limited. Here, we analyzed data on 1823 Black participants in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, estimating associations between childhood segregation trajectories and young adult health. Black young adults who consistently lived in high-segregation neighborhoods throughout childhood experienced unhealthier smoking and drinking behaviors and higher odds of obesity compared to other trajectory groups, including children who moved into or out of high-segregation neighborhoods. Results were robust to controls for neighborhood and family poverty. Findings underscore that for Black children who grow up in segregated neighborhoods, the roots of structurally-determined health inequities are established early in life. •Black children consistently residing in segregated areas have worse adult health.•Even Black children who move into or out of segregated areas fare better as adults.•Long-term childhood segregation linked to adult smoking, drinking, obesity.•The developmental timing of moves to more- or less-segregated areas may matter.•Results are robust to adjustment for neighborhood and family poverty in childhood.
ISSN:1353-8292
1873-2054
DOI:10.1016/j.healthplace.2022.102904