Sexually transmitted infections (STI) disproportionately impact non-Hispanic blacks. Racial residential segregation has been associated with negative socioeconomic outcomes. We sought to examine the association between segregation and STI diagnosis among… Click to show full abstract
Sexually transmitted infections (STI) disproportionately impact non-Hispanic blacks. Racial residential segregation has been associated with negative socioeconomic outcomes. We sought to examine the association between segregation and STI diagnosis among blacks. The National Survey of Family Growth and US Census served as data sources. Five distinct dimensions represent segregation. The association between STI diagnosis and each segregation dimension was assessed with multilevel logistic regression modeling. 305 (7.4%) blacks reported STI diagnosis during the past 12 months. Depending on the dimension, segregation was a risk factor [dissimilarity aOR 2.41 (95% CI 2.38–2.43)] and a protective factor [isolation aOR 0.90 (95% CI 0.89–0.91)] for STI diagnosis. Findings suggest that STI diagnosis among blacks is associated with segregation. Additional research is needed to identify mechanisms for how segregation affects STI diagnosis and to aid in the development of interventions to decrease STIs.
               
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