• J Urban Health · Aug 2023

    Does Urban Greenspace Reduce Mortality Inequalities Based on Poverty, Race, or Both in Philadelphia, PA?

    • Leah H Schinasi, Michelle C Kondo, Janelle Edwards, Jane E Clougherty, Anneclaire J De Roos, and Usama Bilal.
    • Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA. lhs36@drexel.edu.
    • J Urban Health. 2023 Aug 1; 100 (4): 686695686-695.

    AbstractWhile past research suggests that urban greenspace is associated with weaker income-based mortality inequities, little is known about associations with racial inequities, which may be distinct owing to historical and contemporary forms of racism. We quantified the extent to which different measures of greenspace modified socioeconomic and racial/ethnic inequities in all-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality. For every residential census tract in Philadelphia, PA (N = 376), we linked counts of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality (years 2008-2015) with measures of greenspace (proportion tree canopy or grass/shrub cover, proportion residents reporting park access, and the normalized difference vegetation index measure of overall greenness) and American Community Survey-based measures of sociodemographic composition (proportion of residents living in poverty, proportion identifying as non-Hispanic Black, and the index of concentration at the extremes (ICE) representing racialized economic deprivation). We used age- and sex-adjusted negative binomial models, with the natural logarithm of age-specific population counts as an offset, to quantify the magnitude of inequities by each composition variable, overall and stratified by categories of each greenspace measure. Inequities in mortality were weaker among neighborhoods with higher proportion grass/shrub cover or overall greenness. The most substantially narrowed inequities were those by the ICE. Mortality inequities did not differ substantially by perceived park access, and tree canopy was associated with weaker ICE-based inequities only. In this ecologic analysis, neighborhood greenspace was associated with weaker mortality inequities. However, associations varied across greenspace type and sociodemographic composition metrics, with generally stronger associations with overall greenness and grass/shrub coverage, and for ICE-basedinequities.© 2023. The New York Academy of Medicine.

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