AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluates cardiovascular health (CVH) from early childhood to late adolescence, finding that while most children maintain high CVH during early years, there is a noticeable decline by late adolescence.
  • Using data from 1530 youths, researchers calculated CVH scores based on behaviors like diet and physical activity, revealing stability in scores until late adolescence when only 39.4% had high CVH.
  • The study highlights key sociodemographic factors associated with high CVH, such as being non-Hispanic White and having educated parents, suggesting that behavioral factors are crucial for targeted cardiovascular disease prevention efforts.

Article Abstract

Background: This study seeks to characterize cardiovascular health (CVH) from early childhood to late adolescence and identify sociodemographic correlates of high CVH that serve as levers for optimizing CVH across early life.

Methods And Results: Among 1530 youth aged 3 to 20 years from 2 cohorts in the ECHO (Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes) consortium, we first derived CVH scores on the basis of the Life's Essential 8 construct comprising 4 behavioral (nicotine use/exposure, physical activity, sleep, and diet) and 4 health factors (body mass index, blood pressure, non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and fasting glucose) during early childhood (mean age, 3.5 years), middle childhood (8.0 years), early adolescence (13.3 years), and late adolescence (17.8 years). Next, we used generalized regression to estimate the probability of high (versus not high) CVH with respect to sociodemographic characteristics. Overall CVH score was stable across life stages: 81.2±7.6, 83.3±8.0, and 81.7±8.9 of 100 possible points in early childhood, middle childhood, and early adolescence, respectively. Accordingly, during these life stages, most children (63.3%-71.5%) had high CVH (80 to <100). However, CVH declined by late adolescence, with an average score of 75.5±10.2 and 39.4% high CVH. No children had optimal CVH (score=100) at any time. Correlates of high CVH include non-Hispanic White race and ethnicity, maternal college education, and annual household income >$70 000. These associations were driven by behavioral factors.

Conclusions: Although most youth maintained high CVH across childhood, the decline by late adolescence indicates that cardiovascular disease prevention should occur before the early teen years. Disparities in high CVH over time with respect to sociodemographic characteristics were explained by behavioral factors, pointing toward prevention targets.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.124.036279DOI Listing

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