Associations between 1930s HOLC grades and estimated population burden of cardiovascular disease risk factors in 2020

Author:

Wei Hanxue1ORCID,Spoer Benjamin R1,Titus Andrea R1ORCID,Lampe Taylor M1ORCID,Gourevitch Marc N1,Faber Jacob W23ORCID,Korzeniewski Steven J4ORCID,Bauer Samantha J4ORCID,Thorpe Lorna E1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population Health, New York University Grossman School of Medicine , New York, NY 10016 , USA

2. Robert F. Wagner School, New York University , New York, NY 10003 , USA

3. Department of Sociology, New York University , New York, NY 10003 , USA

4. Department of Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences, Wayne State University School of Medicine , Detroit, MI 48201 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Studies have recently begun to explore the potential long-term health impacts of homeownership policies implemented in the New Deal era. We investigated the association between assigned grades of lending risk by the Home Owners’ Load Corporation (HOLC) maps from the 1930s and present-day prevalence of three cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes and obesity in 2020, and hypertension in 2019), estimated at the census tract level in the United States. To minimize potential confounding, we adjusted for sociodemographic data from the time period when HOLC maps were made. We calculated propensity scores (predicted probability of receiving a HOLC grade) and created a pseudo-population using inverse probability weighting. We then employed marginal structural models to estimate prevalence differences comparing A vs. B, B vs. C, and C vs. D HOLC grades. Adjusting only for regions, a less desirable HOLC grade was associated with higher estimated prevalence rates of present-day cardiovascular risk factors; however, most differences were no longer significant after applying propensity score methods. The one exception was that the prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, and obesity were all higher in C vs. B graded census tracts, while no differences were observed for C and D and A and B comparisons. These results contribute to a small body of evidence that suggests historical “yellowlining” (as C grade was in color yellow) may have had persistent impacts on neighborhood-level cardiovascular risk factors 80 years later.

Funder

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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