Erschienen in:
01.09.2013 | Short Communication
Living alone and cardiovascular health status in residents of a rural village of coastal Ecuador (The Atahualpa Project)
verfasst von:
Oscar H. Del Brutto, Daniel Tettamanti, Victor J. Del Brutto, Mauricio Zambrano, Martha Montalván
Erschienen in:
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
|
Ausgabe 5/2013
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Abstract
Objectives
Knowledge of region-specific factors affecting the cardiovascular health (CVH) is mandatory to reduce the growing burden of stroke and ischemic heart disease in rural areas of Latin American. We conducted a population-based case–control study to assess the CVH status of Atahualpa residents—a rural village representative of Coastal Ecuador—according to their living arrangements.
Methods
All Atahualpa residents aged ≥40 years and free of stroke or ischemic heart disease that lived alone were identified during a door-to-door census, and their CVH status was compared to that of a sample of residents that lived with relatives. Four controls individually matched for age, gender, education, job and alcohol intake, and randomly selected from different households, were selected for each case-person.
Results
A total of 185 persons (37 who lived alone and 148 matched controls) were included. A poor CVH status was found in 89.2 % case-patients and 72.3 % controls (p = 0.03). We found significantly worse levels of physical activity (p < 0.0001) and non-significant trends for worse healthy diet and glucose levels among case-persons than controls.
Conclusions
This study suggests that social isolation is associated with a worse CVH in rural coastal Ecuador. An ongoing community-based intervention may prove effective to improve CVH status in these social isolated persons.