Abstract MP16: Status of Cardiovascular Health in US Immigrants Using the AHA’s Life’s Essential 8 Metrics: Prevalence Estimates and Social Determinants From the 2013-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

Circulation(2023)

引用 0|浏览6
暂无评分
摘要
Introduction: The US has the largest immigrant population globally, with a record high ~47 million foreign-born residents in 2022. Immigrants endure social and structural factors that may adversely influence their cardiovascular health (CVH). Hypothesis: Overall and individual metrics of CVH will vary by immigration status (US-born vs. foreign-born) and among foreign-born sub-populations. Methods: The analytic sample included 13,471 adults (19% foreign-born), ages 20-79 y (not pregnant or institutionalized) and free of CVD, from the 2013-2018 NHANES. We calculated the CVH score (range 0-100, low CVH: <50) and component scores, consistent with AHA’s Life’s Essential 8 guidelines. T-tests were used to compare CVH scores by nativity and, among foreign-born individuals, by sex, ethnicity, years in the US, and citizenship. Survey weighted logistic models evaluated social determinants of health (SDOH) in relation to odds of having low CVH. Results: Compared to US-born adults, foreign-born adults had higher overall CVH, diet, nicotine exposure, BMI, and blood pressure scores, but lower physical activity, glucose, and cholesterol scores (p<0.01); there were no differences in sleep health scores (Figure A). Among immigrants, those who were men, Hispanic, and living in the US ≥15y had lower CVH scores (p<0.001); CVH scores did not differ by citizenship (Figure B-E). Scores for individual CVH metrics also varied across immigrant sub-populations. In logistic models, being male, 45+ y, Hispanic, food insecure, or having < college education, depression, or ≥15y in the US was related to 57%-150% higher odds of having low CVH. Marital status, income, health insurance, citizenship, and home ownership were not related to CVH. Conclusions: While US immigrants have higher overall CVH compared to US-born persons, CVH status is complex and varies across immigrant sub-populations. Understanding immigration as a SDOH is essential for effective public health initiatives aimed at improving CVH in the heterogeneous US immigrant population.
更多
查看译文
关键词
cardiovascular health,status immigrants,national health
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要