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女性的性身份认同、不良生活经历与心血管健康。

Sexual Identity, Adverse Life Experiences, and Cardiovascular Health in Women.

机构信息

Billy A. Caceres, PhD, RN, AGPCNP-BC Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Columbia University School of Nursing, New York, New York. Nina Markovic, PhD Associate Professor, University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine. Donald Edmondson, PhD Associate Professor of Behavioral Medicine (in Medicine and Psychiatry), Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Tonda L. Hughes, PhD, RN, FAAN Henrik H. Bendixen Professor of International Nursing (in Psychiatry), Columbia University School of Nursing, New York, New York.

出版信息

J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2019 Sep/Oct;34(5):380-389. doi: 10.1097/JCN.0000000000000588.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Adverse life experiences (ALE; eg, discrimination and sexual abuse) may contribute to cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk in sexual minority women (SMW), but few studies have tested whether ALE explain the association of sexual identity with cardiovascular health (CVH) markers in women.

OBJECTIVE

The aim of this study was to examine sexual identity differences in CVH among women and the role of ALE.

METHODS

In the Epidemiologic Study of Risk in Women, we used multinomial logistic regression to assess sexual identity differences (SMW vs heterosexual women [reference group]) in CVH markers (ideal vs poor, intermediate vs poor) using the American Heart Association's Life's Simple 7 metric and the total score. Next, we tested whether the association of sexual identity with the total CVH score was attenuated by traditional CVD risk factors or ALE.

RESULTS

The sample consisted of 867 women (395 heterosexual, 472 SMW). Sexual minority women were more likely to have experienced discrimination (P < .001) and lifetime sexual abuse (P < .001) than heterosexual women. Sexual minority women were also less likely to meet ideal CVH criteria for current tobacco use (adjusted odds ratio, 0.43; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-0.73) or intermediate CVH criteria for body mass index (adjusted odds ratio, 0.60; 95% confidence interval, 0.40-0.92). Sexual minority women had a lower cumulative CVH score (B [SE] = -0.35 [0.14], P < .01) than heterosexual women. This difference was not explained by traditional CVD risk factors or ALE.

CONCLUSIONS

Smoking, body mass index, and fasting glucose accounted for much of the CVH disparity due to sexual identity, but those differences were not explained by ALE. Health behavior interventions tailored to SMW should be considered.

摘要

背景

不良生活经历(例如歧视和性虐待)可能会导致性少数女性(SMW)的心血管疾病(CVD)风险增加,但很少有研究检验过性身份与女性心血管健康(CVH)标志物之间的关联是否可以用不良生活经历来解释。

目的

本研究旨在检验女性 CVH 标志物中,性身份的差异以及不良生活经历的作用。

方法

在女性风险的流行病学研究中,我们使用多项逻辑回归分析,使用美国心脏协会的“生命简单 7 要素”和总分,评估性身份(SMW 与异性恋女性[参照组])差异对 CVH 标志物(理想与较差、中等与较差)的影响。接下来,我们检验性身份与总 CVH 评分的关联是否因传统 CVD 风险因素或不良生活经历而减弱。

结果

该样本由 867 名女性组成(395 名异性恋,472 名性少数女性)。性少数女性比异性恋女性更有可能经历过歧视(P<0.001)和终身性虐待(P<0.001)。性少数女性也更不可能达到目前吸烟的理想 CVH 标准(校正优势比,0.43;95%置信区间,0.24-0.73)或中间 CVH 标准的体重指数(校正优势比,0.60;95%置信区间,0.40-0.92)。性少数女性的累积 CVH 评分较低(B[SE]=-0.35[0.14],P<0.01)。这种差异不能用传统 CVD 风险因素或不良生活经历来解释。

结论

吸烟、体重指数和空腹血糖在很大程度上解释了性身份造成的 CVH 差异,但这些差异不能用不良生活经历来解释。应考虑针对 SMW 的健康行为干预措施。

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