Giving Compass' Take:
- Social factors like unemployment, income, and environmental health can contribute to higher risks of death from heart disease for Black Americans compared to their white counterparts.
- How do racism and racial disparities across the social determinants of health affect mortality rates between Black and white Americans?
- Understand more about health equity.
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Black Americans are 54% more likely to die of heart disease than white Americans. Social factors may explain why, researchers report.
These factors include unemployment, low income, and lack of a partner rather than known factors such as hypertension and obesity.
The racial disparity holds true despite a substantial overall reduction in cardiovascular disease mortality nationwide.
“For so many years we have focused on smoking, diet, physical activity, obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and high cholesterol—and we know those are important for the prevention of cardiovascular disease—but it surprised me that the Black-white difference in cardiovascular disease mortality is mainly due to social factors,” says Jiang He, chair in epidemiology at Tulane University’s School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine and lead author of the study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Using health data from more than 50,000 adults, the study examined the association between clinical risk factors (obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and high cholesterol), lifestyle risk factors (smoking, unhealthy diet, lack of exercise, and too little or too much sleep), and social risk factors (unemployment, low family income, food insecurity, low education, no regular access to health care, no private health insurance, not owning a home, and not being married nor living with a partner) with cardiovascular mortality.
When the study adjusted for age and sex, Black adults had a 54% higher cardiovascular disease mortality rate compared to white adults. That dropped to 34% and 31% after adjusting for clinical and lifestyle risk factors, respectively. But the racial difference in cardiovascular mortality completely dissipated after adjusting for social risk factors.
“When we adjusted for lifestyle and clinical risk factors, the Black-white disparity in cardiovascular disease mortality was diminished but still persisted,” He says. “However, after adjusting for social risk factors, this racial difference totally disappeared.”
This study follows another recent study which similarly found Black Americans are 59% more likely to die prematurely than white Americans. That disparity was reduced to zero after adjusting for these social factors, also called social determinants of health.
Read the full article about Black Americans and heart disease by Andrew Yawn at Futurity.