# Joint Impact of Residential Segregation and Poverty Across the Life Course on Mental Health

**Authors:** Boeun Kim, Sarah Szanton, Laura Samuel, Karen Bandeen-Roche, Paris Adkins-Jackson, Erik Westlund, Sierra Grey-Coker, Roland Thorpe, Jr.

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1475 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how racialized economic segregation during early life affects mental health in older U.S. adults, finding it impacts White individuals more.

## Contribution

The study identifies sensitive life stages where racialized economic segregation affects mental health in older adults.

## Key findings

- Living in highly segregated areas during young adulthood was linked to fewer poor mental health days in older White adults.
- No similar association was found for Black participants.
- The effect was not observed during middle adulthood for White participants.

## Abstract

Racially segregated communities often experience concentrated poverty, yet the impact of racialized economic segregation on mental health across the life course remains understudied. This study examined associations between life stage-specific, county-level racialized economic segregation and the number of mentally unhealthy days over the past 30 days among U.S. adults aged 50 and older. Racialized economic segregation during young and middle adulthood was measured using the Index of Concentration at the Extreme (ICE), which quantifies spatial social polarization between deprived (Black individuals in poverty) and privileged (White individuals not in poverty) groups. ICE scores (range: -1 to1) were derived from U.S. Census (1970–2000) and the American Community Survey (2010–2020) data and categorized into quintiles. Life-course addresses were geocoded and linked to county-level data corresponding to their ages. Negative binomial regression models were fitted separately for each life stage and racialized group. This analysis included 365 Black and 885 White participants (56.1% male; 24.3% aged 80+). After adjusting for age, gender, and population density, living in a county in the 4th or 5th ICE quintile during young adulthood —but not middle adulthood—was associated with a 61% or 56% lower likelihood of currently experiencing poor mental health days among White participants (IRR = 0.39, 95% CI: 0.17, 0.91; IRR = 0.44, 95% CI: 0.19, 1.00), compared to those in the 1st quintile. This pattern was not observed among Black participants. This finding contributes to research delineating sensitive periods of exposure to racialized economic segregation and mental health in older adults.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762140