Abstract

Crime often increases safety concerns for residents, and safety concerns are generally associated with worse health. Despite that marginalized racial/ethnic groups are more likely than non-Hispanic Whites to live in areas with more crime, prior studies have documented that these groups differentially view crime as a threat to safety. Furthermore, older adults are more likely to report safety concerns than younger adults, despite a lesser chance of being victimized. Using multiple waves of data from the Health and Retirement Study, a representative sample of US adults aged 51 years and older (n= 11,161, mean age of 66 years), we conducted weighted repeated cross-sectional linear regressions to examine whether the association between crime and perceived neighborhood safety varies by racial/ethnic group, by age, or by wave of data collection. Study results indicated that higher crime rates consistently predicted more safety concerns among non-Hispanic Whites, Hispanics, and “Others,” but were inconsistently associated with safety concerns among non-Hispanic Blacks, adjusting for age, household wealth, and census tract-level concentrated disadvantage, population density, and racial/ethnic heterogeneity. Furthermore, among non-Hispanic Whites, greater crime predicted more safety concerns before, but not after including a measure of racial/ethnic heterogeneity. These patterns persisted across the full age span. Racial/ethnic differences in the crime-safety link could be explained by additional sociopolitical and environmental variables including diversity that vary over time. Follow-up analysis is needed to determine if the racial/ethnic differences in crime-safety links extend to health.

Highlights

  • Studies associating age-related hearing loss (HL) with cognition have been limited by non-Hispanic cohorts, small samples, or limited confounding control

  • Tamara Baker, the discussant, will highlight commonalities and lessons learned from these studies, including links between racial, socio-economic, or disease-related vulnerabilities of older adults and their health status, as well as best practices to account for these factors in future clinical trials

  • This study examines the relationship between selfreported instances of major discrimination and inflammation among older adults, and explores whether this relationship varies in accordance with race/ethnicity

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Summary

Introduction

Studies associating age-related hearing loss (HL) with cognition have been limited by non-Hispanic cohorts, small samples, or limited confounding control. Janice Atkins and colleagues, in “Preexisting Comorbidities Predicting COVID19 and Mortality in the UK Biobank Community Cohort”, challenge the practice of simple age-based targeting of older adults to prevent severe COVID-19 infections, and show that specific high-risk comorbidities are better indicators of hospitalization and mortality. “Comparison of Recruitment Strategies for Engaging Older Minority Adults: Results from Take Heart”, by Jessica Ramsay and colleagues, examines methods used to recruit older adults of color from primarily low socio-economic households for behavioral and clinical health research.

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