Lind Kimberly E, Wong Michelle S, Frochen Stephen E, Yuan Anita H, Washington Donna L
VA HSR Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation & Policy (CSHIIP) VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System Los Angeles CA USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, Department of Medicine UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Los Angeles CA USA.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2025 Jan 21;14(2):e035682. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.123.035682. Epub 2025 Jan 10.
Hypertension control and related cardiovascular outcomes among Americans remain suboptimal, and differ by race, ethnicity, and geography. Healthcare access is one of multiple critical factors in hypertension control. Understanding the degree to which healthcare access, versus other factors, produce these outcomes can inform policies and interventions to improve cardiovascular outcomes and reduce disparities. Department of Veterans Affairs Healthcare System data provide a unique opportunity to understand residual racial and ethnic differences in hypertension control after accounting for healthcare access. Our objective was to describe pre-pandemic post-Affordable Care Act implementation hypertension control by geographic sector and race and ethnicity, and assess spatial clustering of hypertension control.
A secondary data analysis of hypertension control among US veterans (n=1 619 414) nationwide and in 4 US territories was conducted using electronic health record data. Age- and sex-adjusted regression models estimated overall and race- and ethnicity-specific rates by geographic sector. We created choropleth maps of hypertension control rates and assessed spatial autocorrelation. Hypertension control rates varied across sectors by race and ethnicity (range, 44.1%-97.5%); Black veterans, followed by American Indian or Alaska Native veterans, had the lowest mean control rates (72.5% and 75.4%, respectively). There was clustering of low hypertension control rates for Black veterans in the Pacific Northwest, Southwest, Missouri, Kansas, and Arkansas, and for American Indian or Alaska Native veterans in the West and Southwest.
Hypertension control rates varied geographically for veteran groups experiencing racial and ethnic disparities. Geographic areas with concentrations of low rates of hypertension control should be a focus for interventions to address racial and ethnic disparities.
美国人的高血压控制情况及相关心血管疾病结局仍不尽人意,且因种族、民族和地理位置而异。获得医疗服务是高血压控制的多个关键因素之一。了解获得医疗服务相对于其他因素在产生这些结局方面的程度,可为改善心血管疾病结局和减少差异的政策及干预措施提供依据。退伍军人事务部医疗系统的数据提供了一个独特的机会,可在考虑获得医疗服务的因素后,了解高血压控制方面残留的种族和民族差异。我们的目标是描述《平价医疗法案》实施后疫情前按地理区域、种族和民族划分的高血压控制情况,并评估高血压控制的空间聚集性。
利用电子健康记录数据,对美国全国及4个美国属地的退伍军人(n = 1619414)的高血压控制情况进行了二次数据分析。年龄和性别调整后的回归模型按地理区域估计了总体以及种族和民族特异性的高血压控制率。我们绘制了高血压控制率的分级统计图,并评估了空间自相关性。高血压控制率因种族和民族在不同区域存在差异(范围为44.1% - 97.5%);黑人退伍军人,其次是美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民退伍军人,平均控制率最低(分别为72.5%和75.4%)。在太平洋西北部、西南部、密苏里州、堪萨斯州和阿肯色州,黑人退伍军人的高血压控制率较低呈现聚集现象;在西部和西南部,美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民退伍军人的高血压控制率较低也呈现聚集现象。
在经历种族和民族差异的退伍军人群体中,高血压控制率存在地理差异。高血压控制率低的集中地理区域应成为解决种族和民族差异干预措施的重点。