PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Good neighbors and friendly local community may curb heart attack risk

Might extend social support network which is also linked to lower cardiovascular disease risk, say researchers

2014-08-19
(Press-News.org) Current evidence suggests that the characteristics of an area in which a person lives can negatively affect their cardiovascular health. This includes, for example, the density of fast food outlets; levels of violence, noise, and pollution; drug use; and building disrepair.

But few studies have looked at the potential health enhancing effects of positive local neighbourhood characteristics, such as perceived neighbourhood social cohesion, say the authors.

They therefore tracked the cardiovascular health of over 5000 US adults with no known heart problems over a period of four years, starting in 2006. Their average age was 70, and almost two thirds were women and married (62%).

All the study participants were taking part in the Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative study of American adults over the age of 50, who are surveyed every two years.

In 2006 participants were asked to score on a validated seven point scale how much they felt part of their local neighbourhood; if they felt they had neighbours who would help them if they got into difficulty; whether they trusted most people in the area; and felt they were friendly.

Potentially influential factors, such as age, race, gender, income, marital status, educational attainment, outlook and attitude, social integration, mental health, lifestyle, weight, and underlying health issues, such as diabetes and high blood pressure, were all taken into account.

During the four year monitoring period, 148 of the 5276 participants (66 women and 82 men) had a heart attack.

Analysis of the data showed that each standard deviation increase in perceived neighbourhood social cohesion was associated with a 22% reduced risk of a heart attack. Put another way, on the seven-point scale, each unit increase in neighbourhood social cohesion was associated with a 17% reduced risk of heart attack.*

This association held true even after adjusting for relevant sociodemographic, behavioural, biological, and psychosocial factors, as well as individual-level social support.

The researchers say their findings echo those of other studies which have found a link between well integrated local neighbourhoods and lower stroke and heart disease risk.

This is an observational study so no definitive conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect, and the researchers admit that some potentially important risk factors, such as family history of heart disease/stroke and genetic influences were not known. But a strong social support network of friends and family has been linked to better health, so friendly neighbourhoods might be an extension of that, they say.

"Perceived neighbourhood social cohesion could be a type of social support that is available in the neighbourhood social environment outside the realm of family and friends," they write.

And tight-knit local communities may help to reinforce and 'incentivise' certain types of cohesive behaviours and so exclude antisocial behaviours, they suggest.

INFORMATION:


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for Aug. 19, 2014

2014-08-19
Two Ebola virus commentaries being published online first: Opinion: Ebola-stricken American volunteers deserve special treatment American missionary workers stricken with the deadly Ebola virus while aiding infected patients in West Africa deserve special treatment, according to a commentary being published early online in Annals of Internal Medicine. As the number of Ebola virus cases surpasses 1,600 in four African countries, public attention has focused on the two infected Americans who were airlifted out of Liberia to receive a highly experimental treatment in ...

Induced quakes rattle less than tectonic quakes, except near epicenter

2014-08-19
Induced earthquakes generate significantly lower shaking than tectonic earthquakes with comparable magnitudes, except within 10 km of the epicenter, according to a study to be published online August 19 in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (BSSA). Within 10 km of the epicenter, the reduced intensity of shaking is likely offset by the increased intensity of shaking due to the shallow source depths of injection-induced earthquakes. Using data from the USGS "Did You Feel It?" system, Seismologist Susan Hough explored the shaking intensities of 11 earthquakes ...

Selective therapy may improve artery repair after interventional cardiovascular procedures

Selective therapy may improve artery repair after interventional cardiovascular procedures
2014-08-19
Tampa, FL (Aug. 18, 2014) -- A new therapy developed by researchers at the University of South Florida (USF) Morsani College of Medicine and Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) may help reduce the life-threatening complications of interventional cardiovascular disease treatment. The researchers demonstrated in a rat model that the novel molecular therapy could selectively inhibit blood vessel re-narrowing and simultaneously promote vessel healing following a medical procedure using a balloon catheter to open narrowed or blocked arteries. Their preclinical study ...

Doctors worldwide should stay current on developments in ongoing Ebola epidemic

2014-08-19
Doctors in hospitals and emergency rooms around the world should be prepared to recognize Ebola virus infection and isolate patients if necessary, infectious disease specialists recommend. However, concerns that Ebola will spread beyond West Africa to Europe and North America are unfounded because of the way Ebola is transmitted and because of highly developed hospital infection control practices, they say. A description of the virus, the current outbreak and recommendations for management of infected patients appear today in the Annals of Internal Medicine. The lead ...

Hospitalizations, deaths from heart disease, stroke drop in last decade

2014-08-18
U.S. hospitalizations and deaths from heart disease and stroke dropped significantly in the last decade, according to new research in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. "Interestingly, these improvements happened in a period when there were no real 'miracle' clinical advancements," said Harlan Krumholz, M.D., S.M., lead author of the "most comprehensive report card to-date" on America's progress in heart disease and stroke prevention and treatment. "Rather, we saw consistent improvements in the use of evidence-based treatments and medications and an increase ...

Cholesterol drug cuts heart and stroke risks by 30 percent in diabetic women: Study

2014-08-18
The cholesterol-lowering drug fenofibrate cuts cardiovascular disease risks by 30 per cent in women with type-2 diabetes, a new University of Sydney study reveals. "The finding is good news for women," says the study's chairman, University of Sydney Professor, Tony Keech. "The study shows that fenofibrate reduced the risk of dying from cardiovascular disease, or having a stroke or other adverse cardiovascular event by 30 per cent in women and 13 per cent in men." The leading cause of death in women, cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a constellation of ailments affecting ...

Older patients with limited life expectancy still receiving cancer screenings

2014-08-18
A substantial number of older patients with limited life expectancy continue to receive routine screenings for prostate, breast, cervical and colorectal cancer although the procedures are unlikely to benefit them. The authors are Trevor J. Royce, M.D., M.S., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and colleagues. An aim of Healthy People 2020 is to increase the proportion of individuals who receive cancer screening consistent with the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force's (USPSTF) evidence-based guidelines. And there is general agreement that routine cancer screening ...

Implantable heart devices result in similar survival benefits among ethnic, racial group

2014-08-18
Racial and ethnic minorities who receive implantable devices to treat heart failure derive the same substantial survival benefit from these therapies as white patients, new UCLA-led research shows. While the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association jointly recommend the use of implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) and cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) devices for all eligible patients, minorities have not been well represented in clinical trials of the devices, and previous studies had shown that African American and Hispanic patients ...

Researchers inspired by marine life to design camouflage systems

2014-08-18
It could be a fun party trick – put your cell phone down on a table and watch it fade into the woodwork – or part of a lifesaving technology used by industry or the military. Researchers have developed a technology that allows a material to automatically read its environment and adapt to mimic its surroundings. The technology is described in a paper published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Cunjiang Yu, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Houston and lead author of the paper, said the optoelectronic ...

NOAA analysis reveals significant land cover changes in US coastal regions

NOAA analysis reveals significant land cover changes in US coastal regions
2014-08-18
A new NOAA nationwide analysis shows that between 1996 and 2011, 64,975 square miles in coastal regions--an area larger than the state of Wisconsin--experienced changes in land cover, including a decline in wetlands and forest cover with development a major contributing factor. Overall, 8.2 percent of the nation's ocean and Great Lakes coastal regions experienced these changes. In analysis of the five year period between 2001-2006, coastal areas accounted for 43 percent of all land cover change in the continental U.S. This report identifies a wide variety of land cover ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UT San Antonio physicists' groundbreaking discoveries open new paths to combating diseases

Operando X-ray tomography reveals silicon–electrolyte interface dynamics in all-solid-state batteries

Building better, building beautiful

Okayama University chemists pioneer light-driven macrolactone synthesis

Understanding how plants distribute iron to young leaves

Next-generation neuro: Studying the infant brain in motion

Before the party starts: Parental attitudes linked to college binge drinking

Ultrasound pinpoints vascular complications from cosmetic fillers

Human gene maps are biased towards European ancestries

Atomically-tailored single atom platforms hold promise for next-generation catalysis

USC study reveals hidden cellular layers in the brain’s memory center

SPHERE’s debris disk gallery: tell-tale signs of dust and small bodies in distant solar systems

Terrestrial biodiversity grows with tree cover in agricultural landscapes

Experts call for AED placement on every commercial aircraft to boost in-flight cardiac arrest survival rates from 6% to up to 70%

“Proton‑iodine” regulation of protonated polyaniline catalyst for high‑performance electrolytic Zn‑I2 batteries

Directional three‑dimensional macroporous carbon foams decorated with WC1−x nanoparticles derived from salting‑out protein assemblies for highly effective electromagnetic absorption

Tropical Australian study sets new standard for Indigenous-led research

Invitation to co-edit a special issue on intelligent additive manufacturing

Success in measuring nano droplets, a new breakthrough in hydrogen, semiconductor, and battery research​

Shopping for two is stressful

Micro/nano‑reconfigurable robots for intelligent carbon management in confined‑space life‑support systems

Long-term antidepressant use surges in Australia, sparking warnings of overprescribing

To bop or to sway? The music will tell you

Neural network helps detect gunshots from illegal rainforest poaching

New evidence questions the benefit of calcium supplements in pregnancy for preventing pre-eclampsia

A molecular ‘reset button’ for reading the brain through a blood test

Why do some lung transplant patients face higher rejection risk?

New study offers a glimpse into 230,000 years of climate and landscape shifts in the Southwest

Gender-specific supportive environment key to cutting female athletes’ injury risks

Overreliance on AI risks eroding new and future doctors’ critical thinking while reinforcing existing bias

[Press-News.org] Good neighbors and friendly local community may curb heart attack risk
Might extend social support network which is also linked to lower cardiovascular disease risk, say researchers