Affiliation:
1. Emily Rosenbaum is Professor of Sociology at Fordham University. Her broad research interests lie in racial/ethnic and immigrant-status inequalities, particularly those relating to housing, health, and education. Most recently she is the author (along with Samantha Friedman) of The Housing Divide: How Generations of Immigrants Fare in New York's Housing Market (2007, NYU Press).
Abstract
This article examines the prevalence of asthma among New York City households from 10 racial/ethnic groups, and it explores whether differential exposure to potentially adverse housing and neighborhood conditions helps to mediate observed disparities. After adjusting for household size, Puerto Rican households exhibit the highest levels of asthma, followed by other Hispanic and black households. Mexican, Chinese, and Asian Indian households exhibit the lowest levels of asthma. Results from multilevel logistic regression models indicate that exposure to deteriorated housing conditions and perceptions of low social cohesion in the neighborhood significantly elevate the odds of asthma. Controlling for these conditions along with household characteristics reduces the disproportionately high levels of asthma among Puerto Rican and black households, although they remain significantly higher than the level among white households.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology
Cited by
69 articles.
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