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      The public health implications of gentrification: tick‐borne disease risks for communities of color

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          Abstract

          Gentrification operates as a social driver of health that can increase tick‐borne disease (TBD) risk for communities of color through either population displacement or land‐use change. Research on the emergence of TBDs in urban environments has primarily focused on the ecological processes of urban landscapes that facilitate favorable habitats for host reservoirs and tick vectors. However, neglecting to view infectious disease risk from a socioecological framework will continue to result in policies and planning that disadvantage communities of color. Using Lyme disease as a case study, we integrated elements of environmental epidemiology, ecology, public health, and urban planning to propose pathways of gentrification as a socioecological process with public health implications. By drawing connections between urban ecology, urban planning, and environmental racism, we seek to bring awareness to disease ecologists, policy makers, and public health managers on the potential role of gentrification as a driver of tick‐borne pathogen exposure.

          Front Ecol Environ 2022;

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          Most cited references63

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          Urban green space, public health, and environmental justice: The challenge of making cities ‘just green enough’

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            Nature and mental health: An ecosystem service perspective

            We provide consensus on the benefits of nature experience for mental health, and a model for integrating them into urban design.
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              Urbanization and Disease Emergence: Dynamics at the Wildlife–Livestock–Human Interface

              Urbanization is characterized by rapid intensification of agriculture, socioeconomic change, and ecological fragmentation, which can have profound impacts on the epidemiology of infectious disease. Here, we review current scientific evidence for the drivers and epidemiology of emerging wildlife-borne zoonoses in urban landscapes, where anthropogenic pressures can create diverse wildlife–livestock–human interfaces. We argue that these interfaces represent a critical point for cross-species transmission and emergence of pathogens into new host populations, and thus understanding their form and function is necessary to identify suitable interventions to mitigate the risk of disease emergence. To achieve this, interfaces must be studied as complex, multihost communities whose structure and form are dictated by both ecological and anthropological factors.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
                Frontiers in Ecol & Environ
                Wiley
                1540-9295
                1540-9309
                May 2023
                August 10 2022
                May 2023
                : 21
                : 4
                : 191-198
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Applied Computational Ecology Lab, School of Natural Resources University of Missouri Columbia MO
                [2 ] Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology Columbia University New York NY
                [3 ] Global Health Program Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute Washington DC
                [4 ] Applied Wildlife Ecology Lab, Yale School of the Environment Yale University New Haven CT
                [5 ] School of Public Health University of Missouri Columbia MO
                [6 ] Department of Environmental Health and Engineering Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore MD
                Article
                10.1002/fee.2549
                b63bd165-34b0-4007-9548-4b77f6202ad6
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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