Division of General Internal Medicine, San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Urban Health. 2013 Jun;90(3):427-41. doi: 10.1007/s11524-012-9729-z.
Housing instability, a growing public health problem, may be an independent environmental risk factor for hypertension, but limited prospective data exist. We sought to determine the independent association of housing instability in early adulthood (year 5, 1990-1991) and incident hypertension over the subsequent 15 years of follow-up (years 7, 10, 15, and 20) in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study (N = 5,115). Because causes of inadequate housing and its effects on health are thought to vary by race and sex, we hypothesized that housing instability would exert a differential effect on incident hypertension by race and sex. At year 5, all CARDIA participants were asked about housing and those free of hypertension were analyzed (N = 4,342). We defined housing instability as living in overcrowded housing, moving frequently, or living doubled up. Of the 4,342 participants, 8.5 % were living in unstable housing. Across all participants, housing instability was not associated with incident hypertension (incidence rate ratio (IRR), 1.1; 95 % CI, 0.9-1.5) after adjusting for demographics, socioeconomic status, substance use, social factors, body mass index, and study site. However, the association varied by race and sex (p value for interaction, <0.001). Unstably housed white women had a hypertension incidence rate 4.7 times (IRR, 4.7; 95 % CI, 2.4-9.2) that of stably housed white women in adjusted analysis. There was no association among white men, black women, or black men. These findings suggest that housing instability may be a more important risk factor among white women, and may act independently or as a marker for other psychosocial stressors (e.g., stress from intimate partner violence) leading to development of hypertension. Studies that examine the role of these psychosocial stressors in development of hypertension risk among unstably housed white women are needed.
住房不稳定是一个日益严重的公共卫生问题,可能是高血压的独立环境风险因素,但目前前瞻性数据有限。我们旨在确定在冠状动脉风险发展中的年轻人(CARDIA)研究(N = 5115)中,成年早期(第 5 年,1990-1991 年)住房不稳定与随后 15 年的高血压事件(第 7、10、15 和 20 年)之间的独立相关性。因为住房不足的原因及其对健康的影响被认为因种族和性别而异,所以我们假设住房不稳定会对种族和性别差异对高血压的影响。在第 5 年,所有 CARDIA 参与者都被问到住房问题,并且对没有高血压的参与者进行了分析(N = 4342)。我们将住房不稳定定义为居住在过度拥挤的住房中、频繁搬家或与他人合住。在 4342 名参与者中,有 8.5%居住在不稳定的住房中。在所有参与者中,调整人口统计学、社会经济地位、物质使用、社会因素、体重指数和研究地点后,住房不稳定与高血压事件无关(发病率比(IRR),1.1;95%置信区间,0.9-1.5)。然而,这种关联因种族和性别而异(交互作用的 p 值,<0.001)。不稳定住房的白人女性高血压发病率是稳定住房的白人女性的 4.7 倍(IRR,4.7;95%置信区间,2.4-9.2)。白人男性、黑人女性或黑人男性之间没有关联。这些发现表明,住房不稳定可能是白人女性更重要的危险因素,并且可能独立发挥作用,或者是其他心理社会压力源(例如,来自亲密伴侣暴力的压力)导致高血压发展的标志物。需要研究这些心理社会压力源在不稳定住房的白人女性中高血压风险发展中的作用。