Disparities in job characteristics by race and sex in a Southern aluminum smelting facility

Author:

McClure Elizabeth S.12,Robinson Whitney R.123,Vasudevan Pavithra4,Cullen Mark R.5,Marshall Stephen W.1,Noth Elizabeth6,Richardson David17

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

2. Carolina Population Center University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Duke University School of Medicine Durham North Carolina USA

4. Department of African and African Diaspora Studies/Center for Women's and Gender Studies University of Texas Austin Texas USA

5. Center for Population Health Sciences Stanford Stanford University Stanford California USA

6. Environmental Health Sciences Division Berkeley Public Health University of California at Berkeley Berkeley California USA

7. Department of Environmental and Occupational Health University of California at Irvine Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFormer workers at a Southern aluminum smelting facility raised concerns that the most hazardous jobs were assigned to Black workers, but the role of workplace segregation had not been quantified or examined in the company town. Prior studies discuss race and gender disparities in working conditions, but few have documented them in the aluminum industry.MethodsWe obtained workers' company records for 1985–2007 and characterized four job metrics: prestige (sociologic rankings), worker‐defined danger (worker assessments), annual wage (1985 dollars), and estimated total particulate matter (TPM) exposure (job exposure matrix). Characteristics of job at hire and trajectories were compared by race and sex using linear binomial models.ResultsNon‐White males had the highest percentage of workers in low prestige and high danger jobs at hire and up to 20 years after. After 20 years tenure, 100% of White workers were in higher prestige and lower danger jobs. Most female workers, regardless of race, entered and remained in low‐wage jobs, while 50% of all male workers maintained their initial higher‐wage jobs. Non‐White females had the highest prevalence of workers in low‐wage jobs at hire and after 20 years—increasing from 63% (95% CI: 59–67) to 100% (95% CI: 78–100). All female workers were less likely to be in high TPM exposure jobs. Non‐White males were most likely to be hired into high TPM exposure jobs, and this exposure prevalence increased as time accrued, while staying constant for other race–sex groups.ConclusionsThere is evidence of job segregation by race and sex in this cohort of aluminum smelting workers. Documentation of disparities in occupational hazards is important for informing health interventions and research.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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