What Is"Socioeconomic Position (SEP)," and How Might It Modify Air Pollution-Health Associations? Cohering Findings, Identifying Challenges, and Disentangling Effects of SEP and Race in US City Settings
Jane E. Clougherty, Jamie L. Humphrey, Ellen J. Kinnee, Richard Remigio and Perry E. Sheffield
Current environmental health reports, v 9(3), pp 355-365
Published, Version of Record (VoR)CC BY V4.0, Open
Abstract
Life Sciences & Biomedicine Public, Environmental & Occupational Health Science & Technology
Purpose of Review Environmental epidemiology has long considered socioeconomic position (SEP) to be an important confounder of pollution effects on health, given that, in the USA, lower-income and minority communities are often disproportionately exposed to pollution. In recent decades, a growing literature has revealed that lower-SEP communities may also be more susceptible to pollution. Given the vast number of material and psychosocial stressors that vary by SEP, however, it is unclear which specific aspects of SEP may underlie this susceptibility. As environmental epidemiology engages more rigorously with issues of differential susceptibility, it is pertinent to define SEP more clearly, to disentangle its many aspects, and to move towards identifying causal components. Myriad stressors and exposures vary with SEP, with effects accumulating and interacting over the lifecourse. Here, we ask: In the context of environmental epidemiology, how do we meaningfully characterize"SEP"?
Recent Findings In answering this question, it is critical to acknowledge that SEP, stressors, and pollution are differentially distributed by race in US cities. These distributions have been shaped by neighborhood sorting and race-based residential segregation rooted in historical policies and processes (e.g., redlining), which have served to concentrate wealth and opportunities for education and employment in predominantly-white communities. As a result, it is now profoundly challenging to separate SEP from race in the urban US setting.
Summary Here, we cohere evidence from our recent and on-going studies aimed at disentangling synergistic health effects among SEP-related stressors and pollutants. We consider an array of SEP-linked social stressors, and discuss persistent challenges in this epidemiology, many of which are related to spatial confounding among multiple pollutants and stressors. Combining quantitative results with insights from qualitative data on neighborhood perceptions and stress (including violence and police-community relations), we offer a lens towards unpacking the complex interplay among SEP, community stressors, race, and pollution in US cities.
What Is"Socioeconomic Position (SEP)," and How Might It Modify Air Pollution-Health Associations? Cohering Findings, Identifying Challenges, and Disentangling Effects of SEP and Race in US City Settings
Creators
Jane E. Clougherty - Drexel University
Jamie L. Humphrey - Drexel University
Ellen J. Kinnee - University of Pittsburgh
Richard Remigio - University of Maryland, College Park
Perry E. Sheffield - Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Publication Details
Current environmental health reports, v 9(3), pp 355-365
Publisher
Springer Nature
Number of pages
11
Grant note
15-2; 4956-RFPA15-2/17-2 / Health Effects Institute (HEI)
RD-83457601-0 / U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); United States Environmental Protection Agency
R01ES030717; R01HL114536; 1R21ES021429-01 / National Institutes of Health (NIH); United States Department of Health & Human Services; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA
Resource Type
Journal article
Language
English
Academic Unit
Environmental and Occupational Health
Web of Science ID
WOS:000791082600001
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85129357024
Other Identifier
991019168663704721
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