Title: Environmental Justice, Public Health, and Health Disparities
1Environmental Justice, Public Health, and Health
Disparities
- Sacoby M. Wilson, MS, PhD
- Institute for Families in Society and Department
of Epidemiology and Biostatistics - University of South Carolina
- June 27, 2008
2History of the EJ Movement
- Martin Luther King, Jr. and Garbage Workers
Strike in Memphis (1968) - Landfill issues in Houston, TX (1970s)
- PCB Landfill in Warren County, NC (1982)
3Classic EJ Studies
- US GAO Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills and
Their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status
of Surrounding Communities (1982) - UCC Toxic Wastes and Race in the US (1987)
- Bryant and Mohais Race and the Incidence of
Environmental Hazards A Time for Discourse
(1992) - Bullards Dumping in Dixie (1990)
- There is a disproportionate burden of locally
unwanted land uses and environmental hazards
including landfills, hazardous waste sites,
incinerators, Superfund sites, TRI facilities on
populations of color and low-income populations - KEY POINTS Disproportionate burden and
differential exposure
4Institute of Medicine (IOM) Report
- Toward Environmental Justice Research,
Education, and Health Policy Needs (1999) - Concluded that government, public health
officials, and the medical and scientific
communities need to place a higher value on the
problems and concerns of EJ communities - Confirmed that minority and low-income
communities are - Exposed to higher levels of pollution than the
rest of the nation - Experience certain diseases in greater number
than more affluent, White communities
5Major Points
- Vulnerable EJ populations are disproportionately
burdened by environmental hazards, pollution, and
unhealthy land uses - This leads to differential exposure and increased
health risks - Greater susceptibility of these populations leads
to greater chance of adverse health outcomes
and/or exacerbation of current health conditions - EJ movement is a public health justice movement!
6Emerging Research
- Emerging research has examined the spatial burden
of unhealthy land uses, hazards, and pollution on
disadvantaged communities and populations and
related adverse health outcomes as part of EJ
science - Literature includes
- UCC Christs Toxic Wastes Race (2007)
- Bullard (2005, 2007)
- Morello-Frosch et al (2000, 2001, 2002, 2006)
- Payne-Sturges and Gee (2006)
7Expansion of the EJ framework to other
health-related issues
- Grocery store access and fast food distribution
in EJ communities and obesity (Moreland et al.
2002) - Liquor store distribution (Romley et al, LaVeist)
- Built environment, transportation, urban sprawl
impacts on health (Frumkin, Bullard) - Access to parks, green space, pedestrian
environments (LaDuke 1999, Wolch et al 2001,
Pulido 2000 Floyd and Johnson 2004) - Lack of basic amenities including sewer and water
services (West End Revitalization Association in
Mebane, NC) - Transportation planning and traffic-related
health outcomes (Forkenbrock and Schweitzer 1999,
Houston et al 2004 Song et al ) - Climate change and heat stress (Harlan et al,
ONeill, Larsen) - Air pollution and respiratory outcomes and
spatial relationships (asthma, bronchitis, lung
disease) (Phil Brown and Marie ONeill Maantay
2007)
8Evidence for Health Disparities
- A large body of research has explored the
contribution of social factors, health behaviors,
and health care access to US health disparities - Research has emerged to examine the contribution
of environmental determinants to racial/ethnic
and SES health disparities - Place and environmental context matter!
9Environmental Oppression
- Vulnerable communities (e.g., people of color,
the poor, marginalized, indigenous, rural,
elderly, etc) are used (directly or indirectly)
to host social and environmental disamenities and
externalities through planning, zoning,
industrial siting, infrastructure and development
inequities, while communities consisting of
dominant racial and class populations benefit
from the inequities, access to more amenities,
and ecological goods and services
10- There is an underdevelopment and/or
destabilization in the growth, health, and - quality of life of host communities overburdened
by environmental and social externalities and
spatially and socially bounded by limited access
to amenities and positive health-promoting
infrastructure. -
- Wilson SM. Environmental Justice Movement
Reflection - on History, Research, and Public Health Issues.
Journal of Public Management and Social Policy.
Under Review.
11Structural Factors (Macro and Meso-level) Institut
ional Racism/ Discrimination Investment
Flows Infrastructure Development Economic
System/Policies Housing Policy Wealth
Distribution Legal Codes and System Sociohistori
cal Conditions Political System and Power
Distribution Opportunity Structures
Segregation (Residential, Economic,
Occupational)
Community Planning, Zoning and Development
Community Ecosystems
Healthy
Unhealthy
Environmental Salutogenesis
Salutogenic Features
Pathogenic Features
Environmental Pathogenesis
Health Disparities, Well Being, and Quality of
Life Community Level Population Level Individual
Level Biological (Embodiment)
Ecological Framework to Address Health and Health
Disparities
12- This EJ literature and ecological framework
focuses on aspects of the built environment and
spatial processes which create riskscapes
(Morello-Frosch and Lopez 2006) or geographic
sacrifice zones - Populations who live in or are exposed to
riskscapes experience environmental health
disparities (Gee and Payne-Sturges 2004)
13Alternative to Exposure-Disease Paradigm
- Legal Epidemiology the process of assessing the
intersection of environmental laws, public health
statutes, civil rights, and building codes to
study and explain infrastructure and exposure
disparities in overburdened, marginalized,
disadvantaged, and underserved communities - Focuses on non-compliance with legal statutes by
municipalities, industry and other entities,
which leads to disparities in infrastructure and
the production of sources of unhealthy exposures
for disadvantaged communities - Other epidemiological approaches focus on the
exposure, dose, and disease in the
exposure-disease continuum and causality instead
of the source of exposure and infrastructure
disparities - Using legal epidemiology and the ecologic
framework may lead to improvements in living
conditions and health outcomes by gaining
compliance with environmental laws, public health
statutes, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act and
Clintons EJ Executive Order
14Examples
- West End Revitalization Association
- Wilson et al Study
15- Built Environment and Environmental Health Issues
in Low-Income African-American Communities in
Mebane, North Carolina
16EJ Issues in Mebane, NC
- Physical Barriers 119-bypass/interstate,
dead-end and unpaved streets, and landfills. - Artificial Boundaries industrial park zoning,
land use planning exclusion, red-lining under
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (ETJ) statutes. - Institutional Limitations Economic disparities,
racial discrimination (old south values in the
New South). - Non-compliance to civil rights and EJ
regulations. -
(Wilson OR, Wilson SM, Heaney CD, Cooper J, 2007
Social Justice in Context Accepted for
Publication.)
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18WERA Community Owned and Managed Research (COMR)
Model
- Flexible, community-tailored, context-driven
- Funding CBO directly as PI and/or project manager
- CBO leads development of research questions and
study design - CBO and community contextual experts partner with
informed university experts - Focus on equity in power distribution and
resources - Data is used for action, empowerment, and change
- Seek compliance with laws and mitigation of
health conditions
19WERA Collaborative Problem-Solving Model
- Collaborative-Problem Solving Model Project was
established through EPA funding and built on
WERAs Community-Owned and Managed Research
(COMR) framework and EPA CPSM principles - Established a team of multiple stakeholders to
use research, resource leveraging/mobilization,
and conflict resolution to obtain environmental
compliance, infrastructure improvements, and
better planning and development - Heaney CD, Wilson OR, Wilson SM, Cooper J,
2007a,b Progress in Community Health
Partnerships - Wilson OR, Wilson O, Bumpass N, Snipes M, 2008.
Progress in Community Health Partnerships.
Accepted for Publication. -
- Wilson SM, Wilson OR, Heaney CD, Cooper J, 2007
Progress in Community Health Partnerships
20Community-Driven Water Research
Septic system failure High prevalence of failure
in West End (24), White Level (18), and
Buckhorn/Perry Hill (11) Exposure pathways
Septic system failures represent pathways of
exposure to fecal contamination Household
drinking water Evidence of E. coli, fecal
coliforms, Enterococcus and F-specific coliphage
Turbidity levels exceeded national drinking water
standards for turbidity (1.0 NTU) Surface water
Fecal indicators were detected at WERA control
and study sites exceeding EPA standards
21EPA Collaborative Problem-Solving Model Grant
Capacity Building for WERA Staff and
Collaborative Problem-Solving Partners
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24Paved Streets and Install Up-to-code Surface
Water Drainage
Installation of Safe Up-to-code Water and Sewer
Services
25Impacts of WERAs COMR Project
- City of Mebane forced to report withheld
information on contamination problems in
municipal water supply - State legislature developed water infrastructure
grant program for disadvantaged communities - Moratorium on 119 Bypass has been extended and
proposed route of roadway has changed to impact
fewer homes in West End and White Level
neighborhoods - Omega Wilson is contributing to new EJ and public
health policy as one of the community
representatives on the National Environmental
Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC)
26Wilson et al Study
- Examine the distribution of ecologic pathogens
and salutogens across different racial/ethnic and
SES groupings at the county-level in the US. - Assess the relationship between ecologic
characteristics and population health at the
county-level in the US. -
- Determine the contribution of ecologic pathogens
to population racial/ethnic and SES environmental
health disparities.
27Methods
- Collection of demographic, pathogen, salutogen
and health data for the entire US at the county
level from 2000 to 2005 - Regression
- Employ Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to
- Spatial distribution of salutogens, pathogens,
and population health indicators - Develop risk index and burden maps
28Sample of Variables in Database
29Results
30Percent Black in the US (2000)
31Average Levels of Salutogens, Pathogens,
Demographics, and Health Indicators across
Tertiles of Percent Black in the US
32REGRESSION
33Regression All-Cause Mortality
34Regression US Average Life Expectancy
35GIS INDEX MAPS
36Reclassified LBW Raster Map (2000)
37Riskscapes
38Strategies and Solutions
- Policy Interventions
- Senate Bill 2047 Healthy Communities Act of 2005
introduced by Senator Barak Obama - Senate Bill 2506 Healthy Places Act of 2006
introduced by Senator Barak Obama - Environmental Justice Bill of 2007
- Community Reinvestment Act
- State of Michigan Land Bank Act
- Brownfields Redevelopment Act
- Zoning and Planning Interventions
- Green and Healthy Zoning and Planning Initiatives
- Conditional Use Permits
- Environmental Preservation Districts
- Community-Based Planning Boards
-
39Strategies and Solutions Contd
- Infrastructure Improvements
- Focus on improving salutogenic infrastructure of
the built environment - Robert Wood Johnson Active Living by Design
Program - Urban Gardening and Farmers Markets
- Philadelphia
- Detroit
- Oakland
- Kansas City
- New Urbanism and Smart Growth use core principles
of equity and justice - EJ Sustainability Movement
- Grassroots Research and Leadership (GRAL)
- Utilize community-driven research approaches
- Community-Owned and Managed Research (COMR)
approach - Establish Collaborative Problem-Solving
Partnerships - Community-based planning initiatives
40THANK YOU!!!
41Acknowledgements
- Institute for Families in Society (USC)
- Robert Wood Johnson Health Society Scholars
Program - Malo Hutson, Mahasin Mujahid, and other RWJ HSSP
colleagues - WERA and EJ colleagues