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Associations between environmental quality and infant mortality in the United States, 2000-2005

Publication ,  Journal Article
Patel, AP; Jagai, JS; Messer, LC; Gray, CL; Rappazzo, KM; Deflorio-Barker, SA; Lobdell, DT
Published in: Archives of Public Health
October 15, 2018

Background: The United States (U.S.) suffers from high infant mortality (IM) rates and there are significant racial/ethnic differences in these rates. Prior studies on the environment and infant mortality are generally limited to singular exposures. We utilize the Environmental Quality Index (EQI), a measure of cumulative environmental exposure (across air, water, land, sociodemographic, and land domains) for U.S. counties from 2000 to 2005, to investigate associations between ambient environment and IM across maternal race/ethnicity. Methods: We linked 2000-2005 infant data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the EQI (n=22,702,529; 144,741deaths). We utilized multi-level regression to estimate associations between quartiles of county-level EQI and IM. We also considered associations between quartiles of county level domain specific indices with IM. We controlled for rural-urban status (RUCC1: urban, metropolitan; RUCC2: urban, non-metropolitan; RUCC3: less urbanized; RUCC4: thinly populated), maternal age, maternal education, marital status, infant sex, and stratified on race/ethnicity. Additionally, we estimated associations for linear combinations of environmental quality and rural-urban status. Results: We found a mix of positive, negative, and null associations and our findings varied across domain and race/ethnicity. Poorer overall environmental quality was associated with decreased odds among Non-Hispanic whites (OR and 95% CI: EQIQ4 (ref. EQIQ1): 0.84[0.80,0.89]). For Non-Hispanic blacks and Hispanics, some increased odds were observed. Poorer air quality was monotonically associated with increased odds among Non-Hispanic whites (airQ4 (ref. airQ1): 1.05[0.99,1.11]) and blacks (airQ4 (ref. airQ1): 1.09 [0.9,1.31]). Rural status was associated with increased IM odds among Hispanics (RUCC4-Q4:1.36[1.04,1.78]; RUCC1-Q4: 1.04[0.92,1.16], ref. for both RUCC1-Q1). Conclusions: This study is the first to report on associations between ambient environmental quality and IM across the United States. It corroborates prior research suggesting an association between air pollution and IM and identifies residence in thinly populated (rural) areas as a potential risk factor towards IM amongst Hispanics. Some of the counterintuitive findings highlight the need for additional research into potentially differential drivers of environmental quality across the rural-urban continuum, especially with regards to the sociodemographic environment.

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Published In

Archives of Public Health

DOI

EISSN

2049-3258

ISSN

0778-7367

Publication Date

October 15, 2018

Volume

76

Issue

1

Related Subject Headings

  • Public Health
  • 4206 Public health
  • 4204 Midwifery
  • 4202 Epidemiology
  • 1117 Public Health and Health Services
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Patel, A. P., Jagai, J. S., Messer, L. C., Gray, C. L., Rappazzo, K. M., Deflorio-Barker, S. A., & Lobdell, D. T. (2018). Associations between environmental quality and infant mortality in the United States, 2000-2005. Archives of Public Health, 76(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-018-0306-0
Patel, A. P., J. S. Jagai, L. C. Messer, C. L. Gray, K. M. Rappazzo, S. A. Deflorio-Barker, and D. T. Lobdell. “Associations between environmental quality and infant mortality in the United States, 2000-2005.” Archives of Public Health 76, no. 1 (October 15, 2018). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-018-0306-0.
Patel AP, Jagai JS, Messer LC, Gray CL, Rappazzo KM, Deflorio-Barker SA, et al. Associations between environmental quality and infant mortality in the United States, 2000-2005. Archives of Public Health. 2018 Oct 15;76(1).
Patel, A. P., et al. “Associations between environmental quality and infant mortality in the United States, 2000-2005.” Archives of Public Health, vol. 76, no. 1, Oct. 2018. Scopus, doi:10.1186/s13690-018-0306-0.
Patel AP, Jagai JS, Messer LC, Gray CL, Rappazzo KM, Deflorio-Barker SA, Lobdell DT. Associations between environmental quality and infant mortality in the United States, 2000-2005. Archives of Public Health. 2018 Oct 15;76(1).
Journal cover image

Published In

Archives of Public Health

DOI

EISSN

2049-3258

ISSN

0778-7367

Publication Date

October 15, 2018

Volume

76

Issue

1

Related Subject Headings

  • Public Health
  • 4206 Public health
  • 4204 Midwifery
  • 4202 Epidemiology
  • 1117 Public Health and Health Services