(Press-News.org) Black adults first hospitalized for heart failure in the U.S. at age 60.1, vs. 73.6 for white adults
Hispanic patients first hospitalized at 65.4; Asian American patients at 70.6
CHICAGO --- Black adults in the U.S. are first hospitalized for heart failure nearly 14 years earlier than white adults, reports a Northwestern Medicine study that analyzed data from more than 42,000 patients across hundreds of hospitals nationwide.
The study also found that Hispanic patients were hospitalized about eight years earlier than white patients, and Asian patients about three years earlier.
On average, white patients were first hospitalized for heart failure at age 73.6, Asian American patients at 70.6, Hispanic patients at 65.4 and Black patients at 60.1.
Using statistical modeling, the Northwestern scientists determined that these differences were associated with social and economic factors, such as whether people had health insurance, if they lived in areas with high unemployment and the level of education in their communities.
Heart failure, a condition in which the heart cannot pump blood effectively, affects over 6 million U.S. adults and is expected to increase significantly in the coming decades.
“These are striking differences, especially for Black patients,” said study first author Dr. Xiaoning Huang, research assistant professor of cardiology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
The study will be published on Monday (Sept. 1) in The Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
How the study was conducted
Huang and his colleagues analyzed hospital records from over 42,000 patients across 713 hospitals between 2016 and 2019 using the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines – Heart Failure Registry. The team then compared ages at first hospitalization across racial and ethnic groups and used statistical methods to see how much of the differences could be explained by social and medical factors.
“Our study shows that social risk factors, including insurance status and area-level educational and economic opportunities, played a major role. These factors often limit people’s access to quality health care and shape people’s health long before they develop heart problems,” said Huang.
Closing the gap
Huang stressed that closing these disparities will take more than medical treatment alone.
“Raising awareness is the first step toward advocating for policies that ensure everyone has educational and economic opportunities, healthy food, affordable and high-quality care, and freedom from discrimination, so that neither your ZIP code nor your racial background determines how soon you face serious heart problems,” he said.
At the clinical level, Huang added that health systems need to be aware that heart failure can strike much earlier in certain communities.
“This means starting prevention earlier and screening risk factors sooner,” he said. “We also need social workers to connect patients to resources that address social needs in addition to medical ones.”
The study, titled “Racial and Ethnic Differences in Patient Age at First Hospitalization for Heart Failure,” was funded by the American Heart Association (grant number 24GWTGDRA1308856).
END
Black adults face heart failure nearly 14 years earlier than white patients
Gap largely explained by differences in insurance, unemployment and education levels
2025-09-01
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Study detects multidrug-resistant KPC-producing bacteria in Chilean wastewater for the first time
2025-09-01
A team of Chilean researchers has identified, for the first time in the country, the presence of KPC-type carbapenemase-producing bacteria in wastewater samples from the Greater Concepción Metropolitan Area. The finding, published in the journal Biological Research, raises concerns about the environmental circulation of microorganisms with high levels of resistance to critical clinically used antibiotics and reinforces the need for surveillance within the framework of "One Health."
The research, which was part of Franco Ilabaca's Master's thesis in Microbiology, was led by Dr. ...
New artificial intelligence model accurately identifies which atrial fibrillation patients need blood thinners to prevent stroke
2025-09-01
Conference: “Late Breaking Science” presentation at the European Society of Cardiology - AI driven cardiovascular biomarkers and clinical decisions
Title: Graph Neural Network Automation of Anticoagulation Decision-Making
Date: Embargo lifts Monday, September 1, 4:00 pm EDT
Bottom Line: Mount Sinai researchers developed an AI model to make individualized treatment recommendations for atrial fibrillation (AF) patients—helping clinicians accurately decide whether or not to treat them with anticoagulants (blood thinner medications) to prevent stroke, which is currently the standard treatment course in this patient population. This model presents a completely ...
Safety of factor XI inhibition with abelacimab in atrial fibrillation by kidney function
2025-09-01
About The Study: In this secondary analysis of the AZALEA-TIMI 71 randomized clinical trial, abelacimab consistently reduced the risk of bleeding relative to rivaroxaban irrespective of kidney function. These findings suggest that abelacimab may offer a particularly favorable safety profile among those with chronic kidney disease; however, larger studies are necessary to characterize the efficacy of abelacimab for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Siddharth M. Patel, MD, MPH, email spatel@bwh.harvard.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For ...
Combination of mini-camera and AI predicts recurrent heart attack
2025-09-01
Measurements with a miniature camera inside the coronary arteries can accurately predict whether someone will suffer a recurrent heart attack. Until now, interpreting these images was so complex that only specialized laboratories could perform it. A new study from Radboud university medical center shows that AI can reliably take over this analysis and rapidly assess arteries for weak spots.
A heart attack occurs when a coronary artery, which supplies the heart with blood, is blocked by a blood clot. This can occur when atherosclerosis causes artery narrowing, resulting in the heart receiving too little oxygen. Treatment typically ...
Study Reveals Details of Overactive Immune System in Patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS)
2025-09-01
Patients with chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME/CFS) have heightened innate immune responses to bacteria, viruses and fungi. While these responses are essential to fight infection, they can cause damage when unchecked. Led by researchers at the Center for Infection and Immunity (CII) at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health with a multicenter team of leading ME/CFS researchers, the new study reveals molecular-level details into the syndrome’s lasting effects on inflammation and immune response that could inform the development of targeted therapeutic interventions to ...
UTSA and UT Health San Antonio complete merger to become The University of Texas at San Antonio
2025-09-01
SAN ANTONIO, Sept. 1, 2025 – UTSA and The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) today merged to form The University of Texas at San Antonio (UT San Antonio), a premier global university that is deeply committed to making lives better for the communities it serves. As a merged institution, UT San Antonio now ranks as the third-largest public research university in Texas according to annual research expenditures, behind only Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin.
UT San Antonio’s comprehensive enterprise now includes approximately 40,000 students, 17,000 employees and more than $486 million in annual ...
Helicobacter pylori screening after acute myocardial infarction
2025-09-01
About The Study: Among unselected patients with acute myocardial infarction, routine H pylori screening did not significantly reduce the risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Robin Hofmann, MD, PhD, email robin.hofmann@ki.se.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.
Embed this link to provide your readers ...
Solar Orbiter traces superfast electrons back to Sun
2025-09-01
The European Space Agency-led Solar Orbiter mission has split the flood of energetic particles flung out into space from the Sun into two groups, tracing each back to a different kind of outburst from our star.
The Sun is the most energetic particle accelerator in the Solar System. It whips up electrons to nearly the speed of light and flings them out into space, flooding the Solar System with so-called ‘Solar Energetic Electrons’ (SEEs).
Researchers have now used Solar Orbiter to pinpoint the source of these energetic electrons and trace what we see out in space back to what’s actually ...
GaN-based electron beam technology from Nagoya University startup poised to overcome critical semiconductor manufacturing challenges at KIOXIA
2025-09-01
NAGOYA, Japan — In late September 2025, KIOXIA Iwate Corporation (Koichiro Shibayama CEO) will begin evaluating a GaN-based e-beam technology developed through joint research between Photo electron Soul Inc. (PeS; Takayuki Suzuki CEO), a Nagoya University startup, and the Amano–Honda Laboratory at Nagoya University.
PeS has developed a next-generation electron gun specialized for GaN (gallium nitride) photocathodes and has demonstrated its effectiveness for semiconductor inspection and metrology (I&M), enabling electron microscopy of nanoscale transistors and high-aspect-ratio structures.
These ...
Circle versus rectangle: Finding ‘Earth 2.0’ may be easier using a new telescope shape
2025-09-01
by Prof Heidi Newberg
The Earth supports the only known life in the universe, all of it depending heavily on the presence of liquid water to facilitate chemical reactions. While single-celled life has existed almost as long as the Earth itself, it took roughly three billion years for multicellular life to form. Human life has existed for less than one 10 thousandth of the age of the Earth.
All of this suggests that life might be common on planets that support liquid water, but it might be uncommon to find life that studies the universe and seeks to travel ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Phase 2 clinical trial results show potential to shorten TB treatment time
UC San Diego researchers expand virus-based treatment options for antibiotic-resistant infections
New magnetic component discovered in the faraday effect after nearly two centuries
AI tool spots blood cell abnormalities missed by doctors
People in isolated cities in Africa suffer more violence against civilians
New antibodies developed that can inhibit inflammation in autoimmune diseases
Global and European experts convene in Warsaw for Europe’s leading public health conference on infectious diseases
How do winter-active spiders survive the cold?
Did US cities’ indoor vaccine mandates affect COVID-19 vaccination rates and outcomes?
How does adoption of artificial intelligence affect employees’ job satisfaction?
Can social media help clarify the threat domestic cats pose to insect and spider populations?
All-you-can-eat: Young adults and ultra-processed foods
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS) awarded £1 million to boost life science partnerships in White City
KIMM launches initiative to establish a regional hub for mechanical researcher in Asia
AMI warns that the threat of antimicrobial resistance in viruses and other pathogens cannot be underestimated
As ‘California sober’ catches on, study suggests cannabis use reduces short-term alcohol consumption
Working with local communities to manage green spaces could help biodiversity crisis, new study finds
Parental monitoring is linked to fewer teen conduct problems despite genetic risk
From stadiums to cyberspace: How the metaverse will redefine sports fandom
The hidden rule behind ignition — An analytic law governing multi-shock implosions for ultrahigh compression
Can AI help us predict earthquakes?
Teaching models to cope with messy medical data
Significant interest in vegan pet diets revealed by largest surveys to date
A new method for the synthesis of giant fullerenes
National team works to curb costly infrastructure corrosion
A ‘magic bullet’ for polycystic kidney disease in the making
Biochar boosts clean energy output from food waste in novel two-stage digestion system
Seismic sensors used to identify types of aircraft flying over Alaska
The Lancet: Experts warn global rise in ultra-processed foods poses major public health threat; call for worldwide policy reform
Health impacts of eating disorders complex and long-lasting
[Press-News.org] Black adults face heart failure nearly 14 years earlier than white patientsGap largely explained by differences in insurance, unemployment and education levels