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- Tarang Parekh, Hong Xue, Sadeer Al-Kindi, Khurram Nasir, Lawrence J Cheskin, and Alison E Cuellar.
- Department of Health Administration and Policy, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA. tparekh@houstonmethodist.org.
- J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Feb 1; 39 (2): 176185176-185.
BackgroundUpstream socioeconomic circumstances including food insecurity and food desert are important drivers of community-level health disparities in cardiovascular mortality let alone traditional risk factors. The study assessed the association between differences in food environment quality and cardiovascular mortality in US adults.DesignRetrospective analysis of the association between cardiovascular mortality among US adults aged 45 and above and food environment quality, measured as the food environment index (FEI), in 2615 US counties. FEI was measured by equal weights of food insecurity (limited access to a reliable food source) and food desert (limited access to healthy food), ranging from 0 (worst) to 10 (best). Age-adjusted cardiovascular mortality rates per 100,000 adults aged 45 and above in the calendar year 2017-2019. County-level association between CVD mortality rate and FEI was modeled using generalized linear regression. Data were weighted using county population.ResultMedian CVD deaths per 100,000 population were 645.4 (IQR 561.5, 747.0) among adults aged 45 years and above across US counties in 2017-2019. About 12.8% (IQR 10.7%, 15.1%) of residents were food insecure and 6.3% (IQR 3.6%, 9.9%) were living in food desert areas. Comparing counties by FEI quartiles, the CVD mortality rate was higher in the least healthy FE counties (704.3 vs 598.6 deaths per 100,000 population) compared to the healthiest FE counties. One unit increase in FEI was associated with - 12.95 CVD deaths/100,000 population. In the subgroup analysis of counties with higher income inequality, the healthiest food environment was associated with 46.4 lower CVD deaths/100,000 population than the least healthy food environment. One unit increase in FEI in counties with higher income inequality was associated with a fivefold decrease in CVD mortality difference in African American counties (- 18.4 deaths/100,000 population) when compared to non-African American counties (- 3.63 deaths/100,000 population).ConclusionIn this retrospective multi-county study in the USA, a higher food environment index was significantly associated with lower cardiovascular mortality.© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.
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