Examining the Cross-sectional Association Between Neighborhood Conditions, Discrimination, and Telomere Length in a Predominantly African American Sample

被引:0
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作者
Wendy M. Troxel
Jaime Madrigano
Ann C. Haas
Tamara Dubowitz
Andrea L. Rosso
Aric A. Prather
Madhumita Ghosh-Dastidar
Andrea M. Weinstein
Meryl A. Butters
Albert Presto
Tiffany L. Gary-Webb
机构
[1] RAND Corporation,Social and Economic Well
[2] RAND Corporation,Being Division
[3] Johns Hopkins University,Social and Economic Well
[4] University of Pittsburgh,Being Division
[5] University of California San Francisco,Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Bloomberg School of Public Health
[6] RAND Corporation,Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health
[7] University of Pittsburgh,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine
[8] Carnegie Mellon University,Economics, Sociology, and Statistics Division
关键词
Neighborhood disadvantage; Discrimination; Telomere length; Socioeconomic status; African American; Health disparities;
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学科分类号
摘要
Disproportionate exposure to adverse neighborhood conditions and greater discrimination may contribute to health disparities among African Americans (AAs). We examined whether adverse neighborhood conditions, alone or in conjunction with discrimination, associate with shorter leukocyte telomere length among a predominantly AA cohort. The sample included 200 residents from two low-income neighborhoods (96% AA; mean age = 67 years). Perceived neighborhood conditions and discrimination were surveyed in 2018, and objective neighborhood conditions (total crime rate, neighborhood walkability, ambient air pollution (PM2.5, black carbon)) were collected in 2017/2018. Relative telomere length (T/S; ratio of telomeric DNA to a single-gene copy) was assessed from blood samples. Linear regression models estimated the main effects of each neighborhood condition and discrimination and their interactions on the T/S ratio. Less walkable neighborhoods were associated with shorter telomeres. Higher air pollution (PM2.5) was associated with shorter telomeres among those experiencing greater discrimination. Findings highlight the importance of understanding the intersecting influences of historic and contemporary sources of systemic racism and how they contribute to accelerated aging among adults.
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页码:3159 / 3167
页数:8
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