| Literature DB >> 33822649 |
Jamaji C Nwanaji-Enwerem1,2, Chandra L Jackson3,4, Mary Ann Ottinger5, Andres Cardenas2, Katherine A James6, Kristen M C Malecki7, Jiu-Chiuan Chen8, Andrew M Geller9, Uchechi A Mitchell10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In June 2020, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine hosted a virtual workshop focused on integrating the science of aging and environmental health research. The concurrent COVID-19 pandemic and national attention on racism exposed shortcomings in the environmental research field's conceptualization and methodological use of race, which have subsequently hindered the ability of research to address racial health disparities. By the workshop's conclusion, the authors deduced that the utility of environmental aging biomarkers-aging biomarkers shown to be specifically influenced by environmental exposures-would be greatly diminished if these biomarkers are developed absent of considerations of broader societal factors-like structural racism-that impinge on racial health equity.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33822649 PMCID: PMC8043128 DOI: 10.1289/EHP8392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1.A “compound” exposome approach. A compound exposome approach for environmental aging biomarker studies joins operationalizing the exposome framework in research study design with efforts aimed at increasing the recruitment and retention of racially diverse study populations and researchers. This approach is further compounded with strategies directed at improving the use of race throughout the publication and dissemination process. With a simple (or reductionist) exposure approach (A), researchers may fail to appreciate the true connections among exposures, environmental aging biomarkers, and disease. In some instances, they may even falsely attribute relationships to race. Similar to how a compound light microscope (when compared with a simple light microscope) improves the detail that the operator is able to observe in his or her subject of study, the compound exposome approach (B) maximizes the ability of our research to appreciate the true and complex relationships of environmental aging biomarkers with physical (e.g., pollution) and social (e.g., racism) factors. In the authors’ opinion, this approach better positions the environmental research community to contribute to the elimination of racial health disparities. Note: SES, socioeconomic status.