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Exposure to Crime and Racial Birth Outcome Disparities.

Authors :
Mark N
Torrats-Espinosa G
Source :
Journal of urban health : bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine [J Urban Health] 2024 Aug; Vol. 101 (4), pp. 692-701. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 02.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Urban communities in the United States were transformed at the end of the twentieth century by a rapid decline in neighborhood crime and violence. We leverage that sharp decline in violence to estimate the relationship between violent crime rates and racial disparities in birth outcomes. Combining birth certificate data from US counties with the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting statistics from 1992 to 2002, we show that lower crime rates are associated with substantially smaller Black-White disparities in birth weight, low birth weight, and small for gestational age. These associations are stronger in more segregated counties, suggesting that the impacts of the crime decline may have been concentrated in places with larger disparities in exposure to crime. We also estimate birth outcome disparities under the counterfactual that the crime decline did not occur and show that reductions in crime statistically explain between one-fifth and one-half of the overall reduction in Black-White birth weight, LBW, and SGA disparities that occurred during the 1990s. Drawing on recent literature showing that exposure to violent crime has negative causal effects on birth outcomes, which in turn influence life-course outcomes, we argue that these results suggest that changes in national crime rates have implications for urban health inequality.<br /> (© 2024. The New York Academy of Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1468-2869
Volume :
101
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of urban health : bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38955897
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-024-00864-w