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Risk of heart disease in urban ‘food deserts’ is associated with individual’s income, rather than access to healthy food

Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes Journal Report

American Heart AssociationDallas, TX – The risk for developing cardiovascular disease is higher in individuals living in low income neighborhoods or with lower personal income regardless of their access to healthy food, according to new research published in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, an American Heart Association journal.

The study, conducted by Emory University School of Medicine, focused on the effects of income, education and socioeconomic status on healthy people living in urban food deserts in the Atlanta metropolitan area.

Cardiovascular disease risk is higher in people with low income or who live in low income neighborhoods regardless of their access to healthy food. (American Heart Association)
Cardiovascular disease risk is higher in people with low income or who live in low income neighborhoods regardless of their access to healthy food. (American Heart Association)

A food desert is defined by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as a location with both low access to healthy food and low income.

Areas with low access to healthy foods are defined as areas where a significant share of people live a mile or more away in urban areas or 10 miles or more away in rural areas from a supermarket, supercenter or large grocery store. The USDA estimates 23.5 million people live in food deserts across the United States.

The researchers analyzed data from 1,421 subjects who were recruited into two health studies: 712 from the META-Health (Morehouse and Emory Team up to Eliminate Health Disparities) study and 709 from the Predictive Health study, which recruited university employees from Emory University and the Georgia Institute of Technology. Participants were 20 to 70 years old with an average age of 49.4 years, 38.5 percent were male and 36.6 percent were Black. 

The researchers studied demographic data, metabolic profiles and early signs of cardiovascular disease, including markers for inflammation and stiffness of the arteries, an early indicator of blood vessel disease. The researchers found that people living in food deserts (13.2 percent) had higher rates of smoking, a higher prevalence of high blood pressure and higher body mass index as well as increased arterial stiffness compared to those not living in food deserts.

The researchers then analyzed these risk factors with respect to the average neighborhood income and individual income. People living in food deserts in low income areas had no significant difference in the studied markers for heart disease compared to people living in areas with low income and good food access.

People with high individual income who lived in low income areas had lower cardiovascular risk and inflammation compared to people with lower individual income who lived in a similar area. Moreover, people with high individual income who lived in an area with poor food access had a better cardiovascular profile than those with lower individual income who lived in similar area. 

Overall, personal income appeared to be the most important driver of cardiovascular disease risk.

According to the researchers, one of the study’s limitations is that it only measured risk factors and early blood vessel disease. These factors increase the risk for cardiovascular disease. In order to confirm that low income contributes to early heart disease or higher mortality from heart disease, a study with a larger number of participants with much longer follow-up needs to be conducted.

“At least in the urban environment, the definition of a food desert wasn’t sufficient to explain poor health in terms of cardiovascular risk factors,” said senior author Arshed A. Quyyumi, M.D., FACC, FRCP, a professor of medicine at Emory University School of Medicine and co-director of the Emory Clinical Cardiovascular Research Institute.

“This study shows that low personal income and low socioeconomic status matter when it comes to cardiovascular disease risk. Physicians need to be aware that these social determinants increase disease risk and that perhaps more attention needs to be paid to patients who fall into this category,” Quyyumi stated.

Co-authors are Heval M. Kelli, M.D.; Muhammad Hammadah, M.D.; Hina Ahmed, MPH; Yi-An Ko, Ph.D.; Matthew Topel, M.D., M.Sc.; Ayman Samman-Tahhan, M.D.; Mossab Awad, M.D.; Keyur Patel, M.D.; Kareem Mohammed, M.D.; Laurence S. Sperling, M.D.; Priscilla Pemu, M.D.; Viola Vaccarino, M.D., Ph.D.; Tene Lewis, Ph.D.; Herman Taylor, M.D., MPH; Greg Martin, M.D., M.Sc.; and Gary H. Gibbons, M.D. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

The National Heart, Blood, and Lung Institute; the National Center for Research Resources; the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences; and the Marcus, Robert W. Woodruff, and Abraham J. and Phyllis Katz Foundations funded the study.

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