Williams R, Bhopal R, Hunt K
MRC Medical Sociology Unit, Glasgow, UK.
Int J Epidemiol. 1994 Feb;23(1):28-37. doi: 10.1093/ije/23.1.28.
To develop a profile of non-biochemical coronary risks for the South Asian population (predominantly Punjabi with origins in the Indian subcontinent) and the general population in Glasgow, with a focus on dietary patterns, and potential causes of stress.
Cross-sectional survey of South Asian men and women of 30-40 years (mean 35), compared with a general population sample aged 35 years.
Data were collected on socioeconomic circumstances, smoking, diet, alcohol, exercise, past health, perceptions of stress and other psychological morbidity, blood pressure, height, weight and waist and hip girth.
The socioeconomic circumstances of the South Asian group were worse than the general population. The prevalence of several circumstances potentially associated with stress, such as length of working day, low income, crowded housing, liability to attack and perceived lack of social support (women), was greater in South Asians. Smoking was less common in South Asians, particularly among women and non-Muslims. Amongst South Asians, alcohol use was uncommon in women and Muslims. South Asians ate meat, and fruit, salad and raw vegetables more frequently than the general population though there were large variations by religion. South Asian men were less likely to take vigorous exercise than the general population. Diastolic, but not systolic, blood pressure was higher in South Asian males than general population males, but there were no differences among women. Men were shorter and weighed less than general population men, with no difference in body mass index. South Asian women were shorter but had higher mean body mass index than the general population. Waist and hip circumference in both South Asian men and women were higher although waist/hip ratios were not different. Self-reported diabetes was commoner in Asian men than in general population men, and angina symptoms commoner in South Asian women.
Among established risk factors studied here or reported in an earlier paper the only one to which South Asians had less exposure was smoking. In either men or women (or both) there was a relative excess of the other known risk factors. There was evidence in support of three newer hypotheses for the high incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD), namely, insulin resistance, stress, and socioeconomic deprivation. The high CHD rates in South Asians are likely to result from a complex interaction of risk factors.
针对南亚人群(主要是祖籍为印度次大陆的旁遮普人)和格拉斯哥的普通人群,建立非生化性冠心病风险概况,重点关注饮食模式和潜在压力源。
对30至40岁(平均35岁)的南亚男性和女性进行横断面调查,并与35岁的普通人群样本进行比较。
收集有关社会经济状况、吸烟、饮食、饮酒、运动、既往健康状况、压力感知及其他心理疾病、血压、身高、体重以及腰围和臀围的数据。
南亚人群的社会经济状况比普通人群更差。南亚人当中,一些可能与压力相关的情况更为普遍,比如工作日时长、低收入、居住拥挤、易受攻击以及(女性)感觉缺乏社会支持。南亚人吸烟的情况较少见,尤其是在女性和非穆斯林当中。在南亚人中,女性和穆斯林饮酒的情况不常见。南亚人比普通人群更频繁地食用肉类、水果、沙拉和生蔬菜,不过不同宗教群体之间存在很大差异。南亚男性比普通人群进行剧烈运动的可能性更小。南亚男性的舒张压(而非收缩压)高于普通人群男性,但女性之间没有差异。男性比普通人群男性更矮、体重更轻,体重指数没有差异。南亚女性更矮,但平均体重指数高于普通人群。南亚男性和女性的腰围和臀围都更高,尽管腰臀比没有差异。自我报告的糖尿病在亚洲男性中比在普通人群男性中更常见,心绞痛症状在南亚女性中更常见。
在此研究的既定风险因素或早期论文中报告的风险因素中,南亚人接触较少的只有吸烟。无论是男性还是女性(或两者皆是),其他已知风险因素相对更多。有证据支持关于冠心病(CHD)高发的三个新假说,即胰岛素抵抗、压力和社会经济剥夺。南亚人冠心病发病率高可能是由多种风险因素复杂相互作用导致的。