Literature DB >> 15925646

Health-related disparities: influence of environmental factors.

Kenneth Olden1, Sandra L White.   

Abstract

Racial disparities in health cannot be explained solely on the basis of poverty, access to health care, behavior, or environmental factors. Their complex etiology is dependent on interactions between all these factors plus genetics. Scientists have been slow to consider genetics as a risk factor because genetic polymorphisms tend to be more variable within a race than between races. Now that studies are demonstrating the existence of racial differences in allelic frequencies for multiple genes affecting a single biologic mechanism, the present argument for a significant genetic role in contributing to health disparities is gaining support. Individuals vary, often significantly, in their response to environmental agents. This variability provides a high "background noise" when scientists examine human populations to identify environmental links to disease. This variability often masks important environmental contributors to disease risk and is a major impediment to efforts to investigate the causes of diseases.Fortunately, investments in the various genome projects have led to the development of tools and databases that can be used to help identify the genetic variations in environmental response genes that can lead to such wide differences in disease susceptibility. NIEHS developed the environ-mental genome project to catalog these genetic variants (polymorphisms)and to identify the ones that play a major role in human susceptibility to environmental agents. This information is being used in epidemiologic studies to pinpoint environmental contributors to disease better. The research summarized in this article is critically important for tying genetics and the environment to health disparities, and for the development of a rational approach to gauge environmental threats. Common variants in genes play pivotal roles in determining if or when illness or death result from exposure to drugs or environmental xenobiotics. Most common variants exist in all human populations, but their frequency can vary substantially,rendering individuals or groups more or less susceptible to particular environmental exposures. Such findings are consistent with the highly publicized analogy, "genetics loads the gun, but the environment pulls the trigger." That is, one can inherit the genetic predisposition to develop a disease but will do so only if or when exposed to the environmental trigger. Poor people have approximately the same genetic makeup as everyone else,but they have the unfortunate experience of living and working in environments containing multiple and high levels of carcinogens or other toxicants capable of interacting with susceptibility genes to cause disease.Furthermore, certain disadvantaged ethnic groups may have a higher incidence of certain susceptible genes that render them more vulnerable to adverse effects of the environments they inhabit. For both of these reasons,much of the nation's disease burden could likely be reduced through better environmental protection practices, especially in low-income and minority communities. Of the many implications of polymorphisms and frequency variations for public health and the practice of medicine, however, none is more urgent than the choice of drugs in therapy. Using such knowledge,randomized trials have identified race-specific drug response differences between blacks and whites [42].To date, most knowledge of the health effects of environmental factors is derived from studies of single agents. The reality, though, is that environmental contributions to health disparities are mostly from multiple agents. These simultaneous exposures to multiple risk factors, which may accumulate or interact synergistically, remain to be fully explained and defined.Finally, health disparity is a significant public health problem that cannot be solved using "business as usual" approaches for funding and priority setting. The current emphasis on basic and clinical research at the exclusion of public health and the social sciences does not provide the interdisciplinary research teams necessary to address such a complex problem as health disparities. Although the poor will always be with us, their health could be greatly improved if social, environmental, and genetic scientists could find ways to collaborate and develop more insightful and relevant ways to address the health of disadvantaged communities.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15925646     DOI: 10.1016/j.mcna.2005.02.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Clin North Am        ISSN: 0025-7125            Impact factor:   5.456


  30 in total

1.  To reduce urban disparities in health, strengthen and enforce equitably environmental and consumer laws.

Authors:  Kenneth Olden; Rose Marie Ramos; Nicholas Freudenberg
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 3.671

2.  Data sources for an environmental quality index: availability, quality, and utility.

Authors:  Danelle T Lobdell; Jyotsna S Jagai; Kristen Rappazzo; Lynne C Messer
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2011-08-11       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 3.  Lung cancer: Biology and treatment options.

Authors:  Hassan Lemjabbar-Alaoui; Omer Ui Hassan; Yi-Wei Yang; Petra Buchanan
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2015-08-19

4.  Homes of low-income minority families with asthmatic children have increased condition issues.

Authors:  Christina M Pacheco; Christina E Ciaccio; Niaman Nazir; Christine M Daley; Anita DiDonna; Won S Choi; Charles S Barnes; Lanny J Rosenwasser
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Proc       Date:  2014 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 2.587

5.  Non-Biological (Fictive Kin and Othermothers): Embracing the Need for a Culturally Appropriate Pedigree Nomenclature in African-American Families.

Authors:  Ida J Spruill; Bernice L Coleman; Yolanda M Powell-Young; Tiffany H Williams; Gayenell Magwood
Journal:  J Natl Black Nurses Assoc       Date:  2014-12

6.  County-level cumulative environmental quality associated with cancer incidence.

Authors:  Jyotsna S Jagai; Lynne C Messer; Kristen M Rappazzo; Christine L Gray; Shannon C Grabich; Danelle T Lobdell
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2017-05-08       Impact factor: 6.860

7.  Eating disorders in medical students of Karachi, Pakistan-a cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Akhtar Amin Memon; Syeda Ezz-E-Rukhshan Adil; Efaza Umar Siddiqui; Syed Saad Naeem; Syed Adnan Ali; Khalid Mehmood
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2012-02-01

8.  Maternal bisphenol-A levels at delivery: a looming problem?

Authors:  V Padmanabhan; K Siefert; S Ransom; T Johnson; J Pinkerton; L Anderson; L Tao; K Kannan
Journal:  J Perinatol       Date:  2008-02-14       Impact factor: 2.521

9.  Community-based dialogue: engaging communities of color in the United states' genetics policy conversation.

Authors:  Vence L Bonham; Toby Citrin; Stephen M Modell; Tené Hamilton Franklin; Esther W B Bleicher; Leonard M Fleck
Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 2.265

10.  Modification by N-acetyltransferase 1 genotype on the association between dietary heterocyclic amines and colon cancer in a multiethnic study.

Authors:  Lesley M Butler; Robert C Millikan; Rashmi Sinha; Temitope O Keku; Scott Winkel; Brent Harlan; Allison Eaton; Marilie D Gammon; Robert S Sandler
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  2007-10-13       Impact factor: 2.433

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