| Literature DB >> 24736569 |
Lara P Clark1, Dylan B Millet2, Julian D Marshall1.
Abstract
We describe spatial patterns in environmental injustice and inequality for residential outdoor nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations in the contiguous United States. Our approach employs Census demographic data and a recently published high-resolution dataset of outdoor NO2 concentrations. Nationally, population-weighted mean NO2 concentrations are 4.6 ppb (38%, p<0.01) higher for nonwhites than for whites. The environmental health implications of that concentration disparity are compelling. For example, we estimate that reducing nonwhites' NO2 concentrations to levels experienced by whites would reduce Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD) mortality by ∼7,000 deaths per year, which is equivalent to 16 million people increasing their physical activity level from inactive (0 hours/week of physical activity) to sufficiently active (>2.5 hours/week of physical activity). Inequality for NO2 concentration is greater than inequality for income (Atkinson Index: 0.11 versus 0.08). Low-income nonwhite young children and elderly people are disproportionately exposed to residential outdoor NO2. Our findings establish a national context for previous work that has documented air pollution environmental injustice and inequality within individual US metropolitan areas and regions. Results given here can aid policy-makers in identifying locations with high environmental injustice and inequality. For example, states with both high injustice and high inequality (top quintile) for outdoor residential NO2 include New York, Michigan, and Wisconsin.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24736569 PMCID: PMC3988057 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0094431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Population-weighted mean NO2 concentration in ppb (percent of total population ).
| Total | Urban | Mixed | Rural | |
|
| 11.3 (100%) | 14.2 (63%) | 7.3 (25%) | 4.4 (12%) |
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| White | 9.9 (69%) | 12.9 (38%) | 7.1 (20%) | 4.4 (11%) |
| Nonwhite | 14.5 (31%) | 16.4 (24%) | 8.1 (4.6%) | 4.5 (1.6%) |
| Hispanic | 15.6 (13%) | 17.2 (10%) | 8.6 (1.8%) | 5.8 (0.4%) |
| Black | 13.3 (12%) | 15.3 (9.4%) | 7.4 (1.9%) | 3.7 (0.8%) |
| Asian | 16.5 (3.4%) | 17.5 (3.0%) | 9.7 (0.4%) | 4.8 (0.03%) |
| Two or more races | 13.1 (1.6%) | 15.3 (1.2%) | 7.9 (0.3%) | 4.5 (0.1%) |
| Amer. Indian/Alaska Native | 8.8 (0.7%) | 12.8 (0.3%) | 7.2 (0.2%) | 5.4 (0.2%) |
| Black Hispanic | 17.4 (0.3%) | 18.9 (0.2%) | 9.0 (0.03%) | 4.2 (0.01%) |
| Other race | 15.0 (0.2%) | 16.9 (0.1%) | 8.3 (0.03%) | 4.7 (0.01%) |
| Nat. Hawaiian/Pacific Islander | 14.2 (0.1%) | 15.7 (0.1%) | 8.4 (0.01%) | 4.7 (0.003%) |
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| Below poverty level | 12.4 (12%) | 15.3 (8.2%) | 7.3 (2.3%) | 4.3 (1.5%) |
| Above poverty level | 11.2 (85%) | 14.1 (53%) | 7.3 (22%) | 4.5 (10%) |
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| <$20,000 | 11.4 (8.3%) | 14.4 (5.3%) | 7.3 (1.8%) | 4.3 (1.2%) |
| $20,000–$35,000 | 11.0 (7.3%) | 13.9 (4.6%) | 7.2 (1.7%) | 4.4 (1.0%) |
| $35,000–$50,000 | 10.9 (6.2%) | 13.9 (3.8%) | 7.2 (1.5%) | 4.4 (0.8%) |
| $50,000–$75,000 | 11.0 (7.3%) | 13.9 (4.5%) | 7.3 (1.9%) | 4.5 (0.9%) |
| >$75,000 | 11.7 (8.4%) | 14.2 (5.5%) | 7.7 (2.3%) | 4.6 (0.6%) |
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| Less than high school degree | 12.0 (13%) | 15.5 (8.0%) | 7.2 (2.8%) | 4.3 (1.9%) |
| High school degree | 10.5 (19%) | 13.9 (10%) | 7.1 (5.0%) | 4.4 (3.1%) |
| Some post-secondary | 11.0 (18%) | 13.8 (11%) | 7.3 (4.6%) | 4.5 (2.0%) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 11.7 (10%) | 14.0 (6.8%) | 7.6 (2.5%) | 4.5 (0.7%) |
| Graduate degree | 12.1 (5.7%) | 14.3 (4.0%) | 7.7 (1.4%) | 4.5 (0.4%) |
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| <5 years | 11.6 (6.8%) | 14.4 (4.4%) | 7.4 (1.7%) | 4.5 (0.8%) |
| 5 to 18 years | 11.2 (19%) | 14.2 (12%) | 7.2 (4.8%) | 4.5 (2.4%) |
| 18 to 40 years | 11.8 (32%) | 14.5 (21%) | 7.4 (7.4%) | 4.4 (3.3%) |
| 40 to 65 years | 11.0 (30%) | 14.1 (18%) | 7.2 (7.9%) | 4.4 (4.0%) |
| >65 years | 11.0 (12%) | 13.9 (7.7%) | 7.3 (3.1%) | 4.4 (1.7%) |
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| White | 9.1 (0.4%) | 12.5 (0.2%) | 6.9 (0.1%) | 4.3 (0.1%) |
| Nonwhite | 14.3 (0.8%) | 16.1 (0.6%) | 7.9 (0.1%) | 4.7 (0.1%) |
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| White | 9.9 (0.8%) | 13.5 (0.4%) | 7.1 (0.2%) | 4.2 (0.2%) |
| Nonwhite | 14.5 (0.2%) | 16.9 (0.2%) | 7.7 (0.03%) | 4.3 (0.02%) |
Population totals may be less than 100% because of rounding, nonresponses in Census data, and category definitions (e.g., population >25 years old is 66% of total population).
Each race-ethnicity category in includes people who reported a single race category and non-Hispanic ethnicity (i.e., “White” category is “White alone; non-Hispanic”), except for the “Hispanic” category, which includes people who reported any race(s) and Hispanic ethnicity, and the “Black Hispanic” category, which includes people who reported Black race alone and Hispanic ethnicity.
Comparisons between population-weighted mean NO2 concentrations for specific populations.
| Group 1 (concentration in ppb) | Group 2 (concentration in ppb) | Difference | Relative Difference (%) |
|
| |||
| Nonwhites (14.5) | Whites (9.9) | 4.6 | 38 |
| Below poverty (12.4) | At or above poverty (11.2) | 1.2 | 10 |
| Low-income nonwhites (14.4) | High-income whites (11.0) | 3.4 | 27 |
| Less than high school degree (12.0) | High school degree or above (11.1) | 0.9 | 8 |
| Children<5 years (11.6) | Age 5 to 65 years (11.3) | 0.2 | 2 |
| Nonwhite children below poverty level (14.3)poverty | Age 5 to 65 years (11.3) | 3.0 | 23 |
| Elderly>65 years (11.0) | Age 5 to 65 years (11.3) | −0.3 | −3 |
| Nonwhite elderly below poverty level (14.5) | Age 5 to 65 years (11.3) | 3.1 | 24 |
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| Black Hispanics (18.9) | American Indians (12.8) | 6.1 | 38 |
| Black Hispanics (18.9) | Total (14.2) | 4.7 | 28 |
Difference in population-weighted mean concentration [Group 1 - Group 2]. For all rows, differences are statistically significant with p<0.001.
Figure 1Within-urban and within-rural population-weighted mean NO2 concentrations (105 million householders) by Census household income category, race, and urban category (large UA population tertile, medium UA population tertile, small UA population tertile, or rural).
Concentrations shown are modeled by UA population tertile (linear regressions: R>0.98 [large UAs], >0.96 [medium UAs], >0.86 [small UAs], >0.47 [rural]; all models are statistically significant at p<0.01; see Tables S3–S18 in ). For visual display, plots use the population-weighted mean UA-specific dummy variable for each UA population tertile. Error bars show the 95% confidence intervals on linear regression model predictions. AD = average difference, UA = Urban Area. AD values shown are for interquartile range incomes ($25k, $75k) and for race-ethnicity groups with highest and lowest concentrations for that panel.
Environmental injustice and inequality metric mean (population-weighted mean) [range].
|
|
| |
| Difference | Atkinson Index | |
| National | 3.4 | 0.11 |
|
| 2.8 | 0.059 |
|
| 0.4 | 0.062 |
|
| −0.3 | 0.080 |
| Regions ( | 3.6 (3.7) [1.1 to 7.1] | 0.083 (0.083) [0.064 to 0.12] |
| States ( | 2.5 (3.5) [−0.6 to 7.2] | 0.068 (0.073) [0.006 to 0.14] |
| Counties | 0.8 (1.9) [−2.6 to 7.0] | 0.031 (0.027) [0.000006 to 0.17] |
| Urban Areas ( | 1.3 (2.8) [−1.1 to 6.0] | 0.009 (0.016) [0.00008 to 0.040] |
|
| 3.6 (4.0) [0.8 to 6.0] | 0.018 (0.020) [0.009 to 0.031] |
|
| 2.6 (2.7) [1.1 to 5.0] | 0.015 (0.015) [0.005 to 0.039] |
|
| 1.1 (1.7) [−1.1 to 4.7] | 0.009 (0.012) [0.0001 to 0.040] |
Larger positive differences indicate greater injustice (concentrations are higher for low-income nonwhites than for high-income whites). A negative value denotes concentrations being lower for low-income nonwhites than for high-income whites.
Larger Atkinson Indices indicate greater inequality. Inequality aversion coefficient: ε = 0.75.
This analysis excludes counties that consist of 1 Block Group (n = 29; total population = 21,500 people) or contain 0 low-income nonwhites and/or 0 high-income whites (n = 16; total population = 65,800 people).
Figure 2Environmental injustice and inequality in residential outdoor NO2 concentrations for US regions, states, counties and urban areas.
The left column shows differences in population-weighted mean NO2 concentrations between low-income nonwhites (LIN) and high-income whites (HIW), with larger positive differences (red colors) indicating higher injustice (larger concentration difference between LIN and HIW). The right column shows the Atkinson Index, with higher values indicating greater inequality.