“…The clustering dimension appeared in 7 studies (Bell et al, ; Biello, Ickovics, Niccolai, Lin, & Kershaw, ; Grady, ; Lutfi et al, ; Lutfi et al, ; Walton, ; Yang et al, ), and both the concentration and centralization dimensions were included in four studies (Biello, Ickovics, et al, ; Lutfi et al, ; Lutfi et al, ; Yang et al, ). Six studies used the work by Massey and Denton () to define hypersegregated MSAs as those areas with at least four dimensions that suggested high black/white segregation (Biello, Ickovics, et al, ; Biello, Niccolai, Kershaw, Lin, & Ickovics, ; Grigsby‐Toussaint et al, ; Jones, ; Lutfi et al, ; Osypuk & Acevedo‐Garcia, ). While the segregation measures that take spatial relationships among areal units into account have been used to explore their relationships with health (Bravo et al, ; Debbink & Bader, ; Grady, ; Grady, ; Grady & McLafferty, ; Grady & Ramírez, ; Kramer et al, ; Mayne et al, ; Salow et al, ), most of the segregation indicators in the selected studies presume that the subunits within the main unit of interest are spatially independent.…”