Researchers studied Atlanta residents and found that people living
in “food deserts,” where there are few places to buy fresh produce
and other healthy foods, had more heart risk factors like hardened
arteries and inflammation than people with easy access to healthy
foods.
But within food-desert neighborhoods, people with high personal
income had fewer heart risk factors than those with low incomes,
suggesting it’s money, not access, that prevents some people from
having a healthy diet that would lower their heart risk, the study
team concludes in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes.
“Food deserts are defined as areas that have below average income
together with poor access to healthy foods, ie. lack of grocery
stores (within 1 mile in urban and 10 miles in rural communities),”
lead author Dr. Arshed Quyyumi told Reuters Health in an email.
“We found that area income, and even more importantly, personal
income was associated with higher cardiovascular risk, and that
access to food was not that important a risk,” said Quyyumi, a
cardiologist at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta.
Researchers have known that neighborhood factors are important
social determinants of disease outcomes, he added.
For the study, Quyyumi and his colleagues examined data on more than
1,400 adults, averaging about 50 years old, and living in the
Atlanta metropolitan area. Just under 40 percent were men and about
37 percent were African American.
The researchers collected personal and economic information and
performed tests to detect signs of inflammation, elevated blood
sugar and blood pressure, as well as arterial stiffness.
About 13 percent of participants lived in areas considered food
deserts. These people also had higher rates of smoking, were more
likely to have high blood pressure and hardened arteries and to be
overweight or obese, compared to those not living in food deserts.
When the study team took average neighborhood income and individual
incomes into consideration, they found that people living in food
deserts in low-income areas had about the same risk of heart disease
as their peers living in low-income areas with good food access.
Meanwhile, high-income individuals in low-income neighborhoods had
fewer cardiovascular risk factors compared to their lower-income
neighbors, and that was true even when they lived in food deserts.
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“People not having access to healthy food choices is a possible
cause for poor health. However, our study shows the greater impact
of lower socio-economic status as a stronger risk factor,” Quyyumi
said.
The study team was partly surprised to find so little impact from
food access, he said, but speculated that distances might be more
important in rural areas. Because this study was in an urban
setting, it’s not surprising that income was an important player, he
added.
Racial disadvantages are particularly important to highlight, said
Dr. Keith Ferdinand, a cardiologist at Tulane University School of
Medicine in New Orleans, who co-wrote an editorial accompanying the
study.
“African Americans have higher rates of hypertension, stroke, heart
attack deaths and heart failure than other groups in the U.S.,”
Ferdinand told Reuters Health in an email. Those racial disparities
are caused by multiple factors, he added.
“Food desserts may contribute to higher heart disease and strokes,
with many black neighborhoods reportedly having more fast food
restaurants, fewer supermarkets with healthy options, and there
being less availability of safe places for outdoor physical
activity,” he said.
Although there is no one best diet for reducing heart disease risk,
Ferdinand said, he recommends a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern,
which is high in fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains, fatty
fish, low in red meat and lower-fat or fat-free dairy products.
"For many lower socio-economic status communities, these foods are
absent, rarely found or extremely expensive," he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2wFmCdl and http://bit.ly/2ffoJyg Circulation:
Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, online September 13, 2017.
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