Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.
JAMA Cardiol. 2021 Aug 1;6(8):963-970. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2021.1137.
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the US. The burden of cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality disproportionately affects racial/ethnic minority groups, who now compose almost 40% of the US population in aggregate. As part of the 2010 American Heart Association (AHA) Strategic Impact Goal, the AHA established 7 cardiovascular health (CVH) metrics (also known as Life's Simple 7) with the goal to improve the CVH of all individuals in the US by 20% by 2020. National estimates of CVH are important to track and monitor at the population level but may mask important differences across and within racial/ethnic minority groups. It is critical to understand how CVH may differ between racial/ethnic minority groups and consider how these differences in CVH may contribute to disparities in cardiovascular disease burden and overall longevity.
This narrative review summarizes the available literature on individual CVH metrics and composite CVH scores across different race/ethnic minority groups (specifically Hispanic/Latino, Asian, and non-Hispanic Black individuals) in the US. Disparities in CVH persist among racial/ethnic groups, but key gaps in knowledge exist, in part, owing to underrepresentation of these racial/ethnic groups in research or misrepresentation of CVH because of aggregation of race/ethnicity subgroups. A comprehensive, multilevel approach is needed to target health equity and should include (1) access to high-quality health care, (2) community-engaged approaches to adapt disruptive health care delivery innovations, (3) equitable economic investment in the social and built environment, and (4) increasing funding for research in racial/ethnic minority populations.
Significant differences in CVH exist within racial/ethnic groups. Given the rapid growth of diverse, minority populations in the US, focused investigation is needed to identify strategies to optimize CVH. Opportunities exist to address inequities in CVH and to successfully achieve both the interim (AHA 2024) and longer-term (AHA 2030) Impact Goals in the coming years.
心血管疾病是美国的主要死因。心血管疾病发病率和死亡率的负担不成比例地影响着少数族裔群体,他们现在占美国总人口的近 40%。作为 2010 年美国心脏协会 (AHA) 战略影响目标的一部分,AHA 制定了 7 项心血管健康 (CVH) 指标(也称为生命的简单 7 项),目标是到 2020 年将美国所有人的 CVH 提高 20%。国家 CVH 估计对于在人群层面上进行跟踪和监测很重要,但可能掩盖了不同种族/族裔群体之间的重要差异。了解 CVH 在不同种族/族裔群体之间可能存在哪些差异,并考虑这些 CVH 差异如何导致心血管疾病负担和整体寿命的差异,这一点至关重要。
本叙述性综述总结了美国不同少数族裔群体(特别是西班牙裔/拉丁裔、亚洲裔和非西班牙裔黑人)个体 CVH 指标和综合 CVH 评分的现有文献。CVH 差异在种族/族裔群体中仍然存在,但知识方面存在关键差距,部分原因是这些种族/族裔群体在研究中代表性不足,或者由于种族/族裔亚组的聚合而对 CVH 产生误解。需要采取全面的多层次方法来实现健康公平,这应包括:(1)获得高质量的医疗保健;(2)采用社区参与的方法来适应颠覆性的医疗保健创新;(3)在社会和建筑环境中进行公平的经济投资;(4)增加对少数族裔人群研究的资金投入。
CVH 在种族/族裔群体内部存在显著差异。考虑到美国多样化的少数族裔人口的快速增长,需要进行有针对性的调查,以确定优化 CVH 的策略。有机会解决 CVH 方面的不平等问题,并在未来几年成功实现中期(AHA 2024 年)和长期(AHA 2030 年)目标。