AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study examines how social and psychosocial factors influence cardiovascular health (CVH) among different racial/ethnic groups, including Black, Chinese, Hispanic, South Asian, and White participants in the US.
  • - Using data from nearly 8,000 adults, researchers used a specific statistical method to analyze how income, place of birth, and education contribute to differences in CVH scores across these groups.
  • - Findings reveal that improved income and educational equality could potentially raise CVH scores for Black, Hispanic, and South Asian participants, highlighting the impact of social factors on health outcomes in diverse populations.

Article Abstract

Background: Social and psychosocial determinants are associated with cardiovascular health (CVH).

Objectives: To quantify the contributions of social and psychosocial factors to racial/ethnic differences in CVH.

Methods: In the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and Mediators of Atherosclerosis in South Asians Living in America cohorts, Kitagawa-Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition quantified the contributions of social and psychosocial factors to differences in mean CVH score (range 0-14) in Black, Chinese, Hispanic, or South Asian compared with White participants.

Results: Among 7,978 adults (mean age 61 [SD 10] years, 52 % female), there were 1,892 Black (mean CVH score for decomposition analysis 7.96 [SD 2.1]), 804 Chinese (CVH 9.69 [1.8]), 1,496 Hispanic (CVH 8.00 [2.1]), 1,164 South Asian (CVH 9.16 [2.0]), and 2,622 White (CVH 8.91 [2.1]) participants. The factors that were associated with the largest magnitude of explained differences in mean CVH score were income for Black participants (if mean income in Black participants were equal to White participants, Black participants' mean CVH score would be 0.14 [SE 0.05] points higher); place of birth for Chinese participants (if proportion of US-born and foreign-born individuals among Chinese adults were equivalent to White participants, Chinese participants' mean CVH score would be 0.22 [0.10] points lower); and education for Hispanic and South Asian participants (if educational attainment were equivalent to White participants, Hispanic and South Asian participants' mean CVH score would be 0.55 [0.11] points higher and 0.37 [0.11] points lower, respectively).

Conclusions: In these multiethnic US cohorts, social and psychosocial factors were associated with racial/ethnic differences in CVH.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10844663PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajpc.2024.100636DOI Listing

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