The Role of Neighborhood Air Pollution in Disparate Racial and Ethnic Asthma Acute Care Use

Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2024 Feb 27. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202307-1185OC. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Rationale: The share of Black or Latinx residents in a census tract remains associated with asthma-related Emergency Department visit rates after controlling for socioeconomic factors. The extent to which evident disparities relate to within-city heterogeneity of long-term air pollution exposure remains unclear.

Objectives: To investigate the role of intraurban spatial variability of air pollution in asthma acute care use disparity.

Methods: An administrative database was used to define census tract population-based incidence rates of asthma-related Emergency Department visits. We estimate the association between census tract incidence rates and (a) average fine and coarse particulate matter (PM2.5, PM10), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and sulfur dioxide (SO2); and (b) racial/ethnic composition using generalized linear models controlling for socioeconomic and housing covariates. We additionally examine for attenuation of incidence risk ratios (IRR) associated with race/ethnicity when controlling for air pollution exposure.

Measurements and main results: PM2.5, PM10, and SO2 are each associated with census tract-level incidence rates of asthma-related ED visits and multipollutant models show evidence of independent risk associated with PM10 and SO2. Association between census tract incidence rates and Black resident share (IRR [CI] = 1.51 [1.48-1.54]) is attenuated by 24% when accounting for air pollution (1.39 [1.35-1.42]), and the association with Latinx resident share (1.11 [1.09-1.13]) is attenuated by 32% (1.08 [1.06-1.10]).

Conclusions: Neighborhood-level rates of asthma acute care use are associated with local air pollution. Controlling for air pollution attenuates associations with census tract racial/ethnic composition, suggesting that intracity variability in air pollution could contribute to neighborhood-to-neighborhood asthma morbidity disparities.

Keywords: environmental exposure; environmental justice; health disparity populations; particulate matter; residential segregation.