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Informationen zum Autor Anthony P. Polednak, Ph.D., is Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Community Medicine and Health Care at the University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT, and an epidemiologist with the Connecticut Department of Public Health at Hartford. He has numerous publications in the areas of public health and cancer epidemiology. Klappentext The potential impact of segregation on the health of African Americans is an intriguing and controversial issue that relates to the fields of epidemiology and the social sciences. Epidemiologists have recently turned to the study of racism and health, but epidemiologic studies have not dealt specifically with white-black segregation and health. This book brings together the results of several studies examining mortality rates for African Americans in selected U.S. urban areas in relation to both social class and the degree of black-white residential segregation. Despite allowances for economic disparity amongst the residents of the metropolitan areas studied, mortality rates for African-American infants and young adults - traditional indicators of the level of social progress - are shown to be especially high in certain highly segregated areas. Beside the book's primary audience - epidemiologists and public health practitioners - this volume should appeal to sociologists, especially medical sociologists, who are likely to be familiar with segregation but not with its potential relevance to the health of African Americans, as well as psychologists interested in racial discrimination. Social workers, urban studies experts, and social and health policy-makers will find much relevant material in this book as well. Zusammenfassung This book provides the first broad picture of mortality rates for African-Americans in large U.S. urban areas in relation to both social class and the degree of black-white residential segregation. It includes background material on the concept of race and black-white segregation in the U.S., and a discussion of the implications for public health policy. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1: Introduction: Purpose and Plan 2: "Social Race" and Black-White Segregation 3: Poverty, Segregation, and "Concentration" Effects 4: From Socioeconomic Epidemiology Toward the Epidemiology of American Apartheid 5: Segregation and Poverty in Relation to Variation in Urban Black Mortality Rates 6: Interpretations and Research Needs 7: Some Issues in Social and Health Policy Appendix ...