Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of
death in the U.S., and African Americans are disproportionately
affected. Prior studies have investigated how limited access to material
resources due to financial hardship may influence health, but the
association between that stress caused by financial hardship and
coronary heart disease in African Americans has not previously been
examined.
In a new study which examined data from 2,256 participants of the
Jackson Heart Study, a longitudinal cohort study of cardiovascular
disease risks in African-American men and women living in the Jackson,
Miss., area, researchers examined the association between the
psychological stress of financial hardship and CHD in this population
and found that African Americans who experienced moderate to high
financial stress had an increased risk of developing heart disease
compared to those who did not report such stress.
The study authors concluded that the psychological toll of financial
hardship may influence the development of heart disease in combination
with stress-related behaviors, health conditions and emotions that
contribute to heart disease. Results are published online January 17 in
the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
"Stress is known to contribute to disease risk, but the data from
our study suggest a possible relationship between financial stress and
heart disease that clinicians should be aware of as we research and
develop interventions to address social determinants of health
disparities," said senior author Cheryl Clark, MD, ScD, a hospitalist
and researcher in the Division of General Medicine and Primary Care at
Brigham and Women's Hospital, where she is also the director of Health
Equity Research and Intervention in the Center for Community Health and
Health Equity.
Researchers analyzed data from 2000 to 2012 from participants who
did not have evidence of heart disease at the beginning of the study.
Participants were asked to rate the stress they experienced in several
areas, including financial hardship, such as having problems paying
bills or running out of pocket money. Participants rated the severity of
each experience of stress due to finances on a 7-point scale, which the
researchers than used to categorize the total level of stress due to
finances participants reported at the onset of the study.
Researchers simultaneously analyzed other participant
characteristics and behaviors thought to lead to heart disease,
including their physical activity and smoking behavior; the presence of
chronic conditions including hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes,
and depression; whether participants had access to health care; and
social issues such as education and income. After considering each of
these factors, it was found that African-American men and women who
experienced moderate-to-high financial stress had almost three times the
risk of heart disease events - including heart attacks and procedures
to investigate or treat heart disease - than those who did not
experience financial stress. Individuals with mild financial stress had
nearly two times the risk of developing heart disease than those
unaffected by stress. The combination of three key factors - depression,
smoking, and diabetes - appeared to explain some of the connection
between financial stress and heart disease risk.
The study was limited to drawing associations in the data and did
not prove a causal connection between stress and heart disease risk. The
authors were also not able to determine whether short-term or long-term
exposures to stress were enough to raise heart disease risk.
Importantly, the findings were limited to those who were willing to
report their stress to researchers.
Still, researchers conclude the results should prompt deeper
investigation into the role of economic stress on disease risk and
encourage policies to reduce these stressors.
"The information from this study covered experiences men and women
had during the recession of 2007 and beyond," Clark said. "As we think
about policies to prevent heart disease, we need to know a lot more
about how economic volatility and financial stress may be connected to
heart disease so that we can prevent unnecessary stress that may affect
heart health."
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