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Community-Based Evaluation of the Associations Between Well-Being and Cardiovascular Disease Risk.

Alison C McLeishTed SmithDaniel W RiggsJoy L HartKandi L WalkerRachel J KeithLauren B AndersonIsrael SithuJavier Pinilla-BaqueroSanjay SrivastavaAruni Bhatnagar
Published in: Journal of the American Heart Association (2022)
Background Although the effects of psychological health and optimism have been extensively investigated, data from community-based cohorts assessing the association between psychological health and cardiovascular disease risk factors are sparse, and the concurrent relationship between subjective well-being and cardiovascular health has not been studied. Methods and Results The current cross-sectional study examined the association between well-being and cardiovascular risk factors among 719 individuals living in a middle- to low-income neighborhood. After adjusting for age, sex, race, body mass index, education, smoking status, and exercise status, we found that higher levels of well-being were significantly associated with lower odds of dyslipidemia (odds ratio [OR], 0.7 [95% CI, 0.55-0.85]) and hypertension (OR, 0.8 [95% CI, 0.63-0.92]). Greater well-being was also significantly associated with lower triglyceride levels (mean difference [M diff ], 7.6 [-14.31 to -0.78]), very low-density lipoprotein (M diff , 0.9 [-1.71 to -0.16]), total cholesterol to high-density lipoprotein ratio (M diff , 3.9 [-6.07 to -1.73]), higher high-density lipoprotein levels (M diff , 1.6 [0.46-2.75]), and lower Framingham Risk Scores (M diff , -7.1% [-10.84% to -3.16%]). Well-being also moderated the association between age and arterial stiffness. The strongest association between arterial stiffness and age was found for those with the lowest well-being scores; there was no association between age and arterial stiffness at high levels of well-being. Conclusions In a community-based cohort, individuals reporting higher levels of well-being have lower odds of hypertension and dyslipidemia as well as lower rates of age-dependent increase in vascular stiffness. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03670524.
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