College of Health Sciences, Walden University, Minneapolis, MN, 55401, USA.
College of Health, Education, and Social Transformation, PO BOX 30001, MSC 3AC, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM-88003, USA.
Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2024 Nov;34(11):2555-2561. doi: 10.1016/j.numecd.2024.07.009. Epub 2024 Jul 17.
Hypertension continues to be a major public health problem affecting almost half of the adults in the US. The intersection of hypertension with food insecurity has not been well-examined specifically among minority populations. We aimed to examine the influence of food insecurity on mortality among adult Hispanics.
Data on adult Hispanic (age≥ 20 years) respondents of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) from 1999 to 2010 were analyzed. Mortality was assessed by linking these data with the National Death Index through December 31, 2019. Using complex samples Cox regression analysis, the relationship between hypertension, food insecurity, and mortality was assessed. Sociodemographic (age, gender, poverty-income-ratio, marital status, and citizenship status) and health-related characteristics (COPD, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease) of the population were included as covariates in the regression analysis to assess mortality risk. The crude hazard ratio (HR) for overall mortality related to hypertension was 4.95 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 4.22-5.82, p < .001). The adjusted HR was elevated, 2.01 (95%CI = 1.50-2.70, p < .001), among individuals with both hypertension and food insecurity. However, among individuals with hypertension and no food insecurity, there was no statistically significant increase in the risk of mortality (HR = 1.09, 95%CI = 0.89-1.34, p > 0.05).
In adult Hispanics, food insecurity significantly increases the risk of mortality among those with hypertension compared to food-secure individuals. Clinicians should be sensitized to the need for food security among Hispanics with hypertension to effectively manage hypertension and reduce premature mortality.
高血压仍然是影响美国近一半成年人的主要公共卫生问题。在少数族裔群体中,高血压与粮食不安全之间的交集尚未得到充分研究。我们旨在研究粮食不安全对成年西班牙裔人群死亡率的影响。
分析了 1999 年至 2010 年全国健康和营养检查调查(NHANES)中成年西班牙裔(年龄≥20 岁)受访者的数据。通过将这些数据与截至 2019 年 12 月 31 日的国家死亡指数进行链接,评估了死亡率。使用复杂样本 Cox 回归分析评估了高血压、粮食不安全与死亡率之间的关系。将人口的社会人口统计学(年龄、性别、贫困收入比、婚姻状况和公民身份)和与健康相关的特征(COPD、糖尿病、心血管疾病、慢性肾脏病)纳入回归分析作为协变量,以评估死亡率风险。与高血压相关的总死亡率的粗危险比(HR)为 4.95(95%置信区间[CI] = 4.22-5.82,p<.001)。调整后的 HR 升高,为 2.01(95%CI = 1.50-2.70,p<.001),在同时患有高血压和粮食不安全的人群中。然而,在患有高血压但无粮食不安全的人群中,死亡率风险没有统计学显著增加(HR=1.09,95%CI=0.89-1.34,p>.05)。
在成年西班牙裔人群中,与粮食安全人群相比,粮食不安全显著增加了高血压患者的死亡率风险。临床医生应意识到高血压西班牙裔人群的粮食安全需求,以便有效管理高血压并降低过早死亡率。