BUFFALO, N.Y. — People living in redlined neighborhoods in 1940 didn’t live as long as those living in neighborhoods with access to credit and home loans, according to a new paper by researchers at ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Odds for severe maternal morbidity were higher for mothers who lived in historically redlined and recently ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . People who lived in historically redlined neighborhoods were more likely to have cardiometabolic diseases. Steps ...
U.S. military veterans who lived in what were once known as “redlined” areas had a higher risk for heart attacks and other cardiovascular issues, according to a new study by researchers at Case ...
In parts of cities once marked “hazardous” on federal housing maps, an ambulance is still more likely to show up late than in neighborhoods that bankers favored nearly a century ago, according to a ...
It has been well established that the wealth disparities in America between white and African American families have largely been created by differences in housing opportunities. Through housing ...
As part of the New Deal, several governmental programs were created to expand homeownership through mortgages and loans. However, neighborhoods with primarily Black or immigrant communities often were ...
Imagine being diagnosed with cancer. Now suppose that the likelihood of your survival might be determined by nearly a century-old housing policy that preceded your birth. Unlikely, isn't it? But that ...
People who live in neighborhoods that were subjected to the historical practice of “redlining” may be less likely to receive lifesaving care from a bystander during a cardiac arrest than people in ...
People living in redlined neighborhoods in 1940 didn’t live as long as those living in neighborhoods with access to credit and home loans, according to a new paper by researchers at UB and Texas A&M ...