Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities

Objective To study the magnitude and direction of city-level racial and ethnic differences in poverty and education to characterise health equity and social determinants of health in California cities.Design We used data from the American Community Survey, United States Census Bureau, 2006–2010, and...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dulce Bustamante-Zamora, Neil Maizlish
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2017-06-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/5/e013975.full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823857420024152064
author Dulce Bustamante-Zamora
Neil Maizlish
author_facet Dulce Bustamante-Zamora
Neil Maizlish
author_sort Dulce Bustamante-Zamora
collection DOAJ
description Objective To study the magnitude and direction of city-level racial and ethnic differences in poverty and education to characterise health equity and social determinants of health in California cities.Design We used data from the American Community Survey, United States Census Bureau, 2006–2010, and calculated differences in the prevalence of poverty and low educational attainment in adults by race/ethnicity and by census tracts within California cities. For race/ethnicity comparisons, when the referent group (p2) to calculate the difference (p1−p2) was the non-Hispanic White population (considered a historically advantaged group), a positive difference was considered a health inequity. Differences with a non-White reference group were considered health disparities.Setting Cities of the State of California, USA.Results Within-city differences in the prevalence of poverty and low educational attainment disfavoured Black and Latinos compared with Whites in over 78% of the cities. Compared with Whites, the median within-city poverty difference was 7.0% for Latinos and 6.2% for Blacks. For education, median within-city difference was 26.6% for Latinos compared with Whites. In a small, but not negligible proportion of cities, historically disadvantaged race/ethnicity groups had better social determinants of health outcomes than Whites. The median difference between the highest and lowest census tracts within cities was 14.3% for poverty and 15.7% for low educational attainment. Overall city poverty rate was weakly, but positively correlated with within-city racial/ethnic differences.Conclusions Disparities and inequities are widespread in California. Local health departments can use these findings to partner with cities in their jurisdiction and design strategies to reduce racial, ethnic and geographic differences in economic and educational outcomes. These analytic methods could be used in an ongoing surveillance system to monitor these determinants of health.
format Article
id doaj-art-586e07d070af433b92a70772b9f1cd62
institution Kabale University
issn 2044-6055
language English
publishDate 2017-06-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
series BMJ Open
spelling doaj-art-586e07d070af433b92a70772b9f1cd622025-02-11T21:05:09ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552017-06-017510.1136/bmjopen-2016-013975Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparitiesDulce Bustamante-Zamora0Neil Maizlish11 Public Health, Epidemiologist, San Bruno, California, USA2 Public Health, Epidemiologist, Berkeley, California, USAObjective To study the magnitude and direction of city-level racial and ethnic differences in poverty and education to characterise health equity and social determinants of health in California cities.Design We used data from the American Community Survey, United States Census Bureau, 2006–2010, and calculated differences in the prevalence of poverty and low educational attainment in adults by race/ethnicity and by census tracts within California cities. For race/ethnicity comparisons, when the referent group (p2) to calculate the difference (p1−p2) was the non-Hispanic White population (considered a historically advantaged group), a positive difference was considered a health inequity. Differences with a non-White reference group were considered health disparities.Setting Cities of the State of California, USA.Results Within-city differences in the prevalence of poverty and low educational attainment disfavoured Black and Latinos compared with Whites in over 78% of the cities. Compared with Whites, the median within-city poverty difference was 7.0% for Latinos and 6.2% for Blacks. For education, median within-city difference was 26.6% for Latinos compared with Whites. In a small, but not negligible proportion of cities, historically disadvantaged race/ethnicity groups had better social determinants of health outcomes than Whites. The median difference between the highest and lowest census tracts within cities was 14.3% for poverty and 15.7% for low educational attainment. Overall city poverty rate was weakly, but positively correlated with within-city racial/ethnic differences.Conclusions Disparities and inequities are widespread in California. Local health departments can use these findings to partner with cities in their jurisdiction and design strategies to reduce racial, ethnic and geographic differences in economic and educational outcomes. These analytic methods could be used in an ongoing surveillance system to monitor these determinants of health.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/5/e013975.full
spellingShingle Dulce Bustamante-Zamora
Neil Maizlish
Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities
BMJ Open
title Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities
title_full Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities
title_fullStr Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities
title_full_unstemmed Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities
title_short Cross-sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in California cities: racial/ethnic and geographic disparities
title_sort cross sectional analysis of two social determinants of health in california cities racial ethnic and geographic disparities
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/5/e013975.full
work_keys_str_mv AT dulcebustamantezamora crosssectionalanalysisoftwosocialdeterminantsofhealthincaliforniacitiesracialethnicandgeographicdisparities
AT neilmaizlish crosssectionalanalysisoftwosocialdeterminantsofhealthincaliforniacitiesracialethnicandgeographicdisparities