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Place, Not Race: Disparities Dissipate In Southwest Baltimore When Blacks And Whites Live Under Similar Conditions

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TLDR
Focusing on a racially integrated, low-income neighborhood of Southwest Baltimore, Maryland, it is found that nationally reported disparities in hypertension, diabetes, obesity among women, and use of health services either vanished or substantially narrowed and that when social factors are equalized, racial disparities are minimized.
Abstract
Much of the current health disparities literature fails to account for the fact that the nation is largely segregated, leaving racial groups exposed to different health risks and with variable access to health services based on where they live. We sought to determine if racial health disparities typically reported in national studies remain the same when black and white Americans live in integrated settings. Focusing on a racially integrated, low-income neighborhood of Southwest Baltimore, Maryland, we found that nationally reported disparities in hypertension, diabetes, obesity among women, and use of health services either vanished or substantially narrowed. The sole exception was smoking: We found that white residents were more likely than black residents to smoke, underscoring the higher rates of ill health in whites in the Baltimore sample than seen in national data. As a result, we concluded that racial differences in social environments explain a meaningful portion of disparities typically found in national data. We further concluded that when social factors are equalized, racial disparities are minimized. Policies aimed solely at health behavior change, biological differences among racial groups, or increased access to health care are limited in their ability to close racial disparities in health. Such policies must address the differing resources of neighborhoods and must aim to improve the underlying conditions of health for all.

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A Mother's Love: A Narrative Analysis of Food Advertisements in an African American Targeted Women's Magazine

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Ecological Perspective on Health Promotion Programs

TL;DR: An ecological model for health promotion is proposed which focuses on both individual and social environmental factors as targets for health promotions and addresses the importance of interventions directed at changing interpersonal, organizational, community, and public policy factors which support and maintain unhealthy behaviors.
Journal ArticleDOI

An ecological approach to creating active living communities.

TL;DR: It is concluded that multilevel interventions based on ecological models and targeting individuals, social environments, physical environments, and policies must be implemented to achieve population change in physical activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Racial Residential Segregation: A Fundamental Cause of Racial Disparities in Health:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review evidence that suggests that segregation is a primary cause of racial differences in socioeconomic status (SES) by determining access to education and employment opportunities, and conclude that effective efforts to eliminate racial disparities in health must seriously confront segregation and its pervasive consequences.
Journal Article

Racial residential segregation: A fundamental cause of racial disparities in health

TL;DR: Evidence that suggests that segregation is a primary cause of racial differences in socioeconomic status by determining access to education and employment opportunities and that effective efforts to eliminate racial disparities in health must seriously confront segregation is reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Establishing and maintaining healthy environments. Toward a social ecology of health promotion.

TL;DR: The author offers a social ecological analysis of health promotive environments, emphasizing the transactions between individual or collective behavior and the health resources and constraints that exist in specific environmental settings.
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