Higher Neighborhood Social Vulnerability is Associated with Lower Life's Essential 8 Cardiovascular Health Scores: the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study
Walker, J. M.; Lam, E.; Won, D. J.; McGowan, C.; Juarez, L.; Kiefe, C. I.; Kershaw, K. N.; Ning, H.; Lloyd-Jones, D. M.
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BackgroundNeighborhood social vulnerability may shape cardiovascular health (CVH), but its association with Lifes Essential 8 (LE8), and whether changes in vulnerability track with changes in CVH during midlife, are unclear. We examined cross-sectional and longitudinal associations of the Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) with LE8 and assessed differences by SVI domain, LE8 component, race, and sex. MethodsWe analyzed CARDIA participants at Year 15 (Y15; 2000-2001; n = 3,168; mean age 40 years) and Year 30 (Y30; 2015-2016; n = 2,267; mean age 55 years). Residential addresses were geocoded and linked to 2000 and 2016 SVI. Participants were stratified by SVI quartiles. CVH scores were calculated from LE8 metrics (range 0-100; higher is better CVH), excluding sleep. Using multivariable linear regression adjusted for age, sex, race, and educational attainment, we estimated LE8 differences across SVI quartiles and associations of 15-year SVI change/residential mobility with change in LE8. Cox models estimated incident CVD associations. ResultsHigher SVI was associated with lower LE8 at both exams. Adjusted Q4 vs Q1 differences in overall LE8 were -5.34 points (95% CI, -6.90 to -3.78) at Y15 and -4.60 points (95% CI, -6.51 to -2.69) at Y30. Among the four SVI domains, SES and household characteristics drove most of the disparity in LE8 scores (Y30 Q4 vs. Q1: SES {Delta} = -6.98; household {Delta} = -6.56 points). Component-level differences across quartiles of SVI were largest for nicotine exposure at Y15 (-13.09 points) and physical activity at Y30 (-13.09 points). Changes in SVI and residential mobility were not significantly associated with change in LE8. ConclusionHigher social vulnerability was associated with significantly lower CVH. Socioeconomic and household factors, along with behavioral gaps in nicotine exposure and physical activity, may be key targets for community-level interventions to improve cardiovascular health equity.
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