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01-09-2012 | Original paper

Metropolitan area racial residential segregation, neighborhood racial composition, and breast cancer mortality

Authors: Emily F. Russell, Michael R. Kramer, Hannah L. F. Cooper, Sheryl Gabram-Mendola, Diana Senior-Crosby, Kimberly R. Jacob Arriola

Published in: Cancer Causes & Control | Issue 9/2012

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Abstract

Purpose

There are significant relationships between racial residential segregation (RRS) and a range of health outcomes, including cancer-related outcomes. This study explores the contribution of metropolitan area RRS, census tract racial composition and breast cancer and all-cause mortality among black and white breast cancer patients.

Methods

This study has three units of analysis: women diagnosed with breast cancer (n = 22,088), census tracts where they lived at diagnosis (n = 1,373), and the metropolitan statistical area (MSA)/micropolitan statistical area (MiSA) where they lived at diagnosis (n = 37). Neighborhood racial composition was measured as the percent of black residents in the census tract. Metropolitan area RRS was measured using the Information Theory Index. Multilevel Cox proportional hazards models examined the association of metropolitan area RRS and census tract racial composition with breast cancer and all-cause mortality. Survival analysis explored and compared the risk of death in women exposed to environments where a higher and lower proportion of residents were black.

Results

Breast cancer mortality disparities were largest in racially mixed tracts located in high MSA/MiSA segregation areas (RR = 2.06, 95 % CI 1.70, 2.50). For black but not white women, as MSA/MiSA RRS increased, there was an increased risk for breast cancer mortality (HR = 2.20, 95 % CI 1.09, 4.45). For all-cause mortality, MSA/MiSA segregation was not a significant predictor, but increasing tract percent black was associated with increased risk for white but not black women (HR 1.29, 95 % CI 1.05, 1.58).

Conclusions

Racial residential segregation may influence health for blacks and whites differently. Pathways through which RRS patterns impact health should be further explored.
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Metadata
Title
Metropolitan area racial residential segregation, neighborhood racial composition, and breast cancer mortality
Authors
Emily F. Russell
Michael R. Kramer
Hannah L. F. Cooper
Sheryl Gabram-Mendola
Diana Senior-Crosby
Kimberly R. Jacob Arriola
Publication date
01-09-2012
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Cancer Causes & Control / Issue 9/2012
Print ISSN: 0957-5243
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7225
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-012-0029-4
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