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The Relationship of Neighborhood Disadvantage, Biological Aging, and Psychosocial Risk and Resilience Factors in Heart Failure Incidence Among Black Persons: A Moderated Mediation Analysis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Deprived living environments increase the risk of heart failure (HF) in non-Hispanic Black individuals, especially those in disadvantaged neighborhoods, highlighting the need for better understanding of individual risk factors.
  • The study used data from 1,448 Black individuals to examine how neighborhood disadvantage contributes to HF through accelerated biological aging and is influenced by psychosocial factors like negative affect and optimism.
  • Results showed that higher negative affect increased the risk of HF linked to neighborhood disadvantage, indicating the importance of addressing both neighborhood and individual psychosocial factors in interventions.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Deprived living environments contribute to greater heart failure (HF) risk among non-Hispanic Black persons, who disproportionately occupy disadvantaged neighborhoods. The mechanisms for these effects are not fully explicated, partially attributable to an insufficient understanding of the individual factors that contribute additional risk or resilience to the impact of neighborhood disadvantage on health. The objective of this study was, therefore, to clarify the complex pathways over which such exposures act to facilitate more targeted, effective interventions. Given the evidence for a mediating role of biological age and a moderating role of individual psychosocial characteristics in the neighborhood disadvantage-HF link, we tested a moderated mediation mechanism.

Methods: Using multilevel causal moderated mediation models, we prospectively examined whether the association of neighborhood disadvantage with incident HF mediated through accelerated biological aging, captured by the GrimAge epigenetic clock, is moderated by hypothesized psychosocial risk (negative affect) and resilience (optimism) factors.

Results: Among a sample of 1,448 Black participants in the shared Jackson Heart Study-Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities cohort (mean age 64.3 years), 334 adjudicated incident hospitalized HF events occurred over a median follow-up of 18 years. In models adjusted for age and sex, the indirect (GrimAge-mediated) effect of neighborhood disadvantage was moderated by psychosocial risk such that for every standard deviation increase in negative affect the hazards of HF was 1.18 (95% confidence interval = 1.05, 1.36). No moderated mediation effect was detected for optimism.

Discussion: Findings support the necessity for multilevel interventions simultaneously addressing neighborhood and individual psychosocial risk in the reduction of HF among Black persons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10745279PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbad121DOI Listing

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