Contribution of income and job strain to the association between education and cardiovascular disease in 1.6 million Danish employees
European Heart Journal, ISSN: 1522-9645, Vol: 41, Issue: 11, Page: 1164-1178
2020
- 40Citations
- 79Captures
- 3Mentions
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Metrics Details
- Citations40
- Citation Indexes39
- 39
- CrossRef32
- Policy Citations1
- 1
- Captures79
- Readers79
- 79
- Mentions3
- News Mentions3
- 3
Most Recent News
Income, education, work stress may predict CVD
Low education was able to predict incident CVD among patients who were initially healthy and CVD mortality among those with prevalent cardiometabolic disease, according to a study published in the European Heart Journal. Job strain and income were contributors to a higher risk for CVD mortality for men with low education and cardiometabolic disease, according to the study. “Our interpretation of t
Article Description
Aims: We examined the extent to which associations between education and cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality are attributable to income and work stress. Methods and results: We included all employed Danish residents aged 30-59 years in 2000. Cardiovascular disease morbidity analyses included 1 638 270 individuals, free of cardiometabolic disease (CVD or diabetes). Mortality analyses included 41 944 individuals with cardiometabolic disease. We assessed education and income annually from population registers and work stress, defined as job strain, with a job-exposure matrix. Outcomes were ascertained until 2014 from health registers and risk was estimated using Cox regression. During 10 957 399 (men) and 10 776 516 person-years (women), we identified 51 585 and 24 075 incident CVD cases, respectively. For men with low education, risk of CVD was 1.62 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.58-1.66] before and 1.46 (95% CI 1.42-1.50) after adjustment for income and job strain (25% reduction). In women, estimates were 1.66 (95% CI 1.61-1.72) and 1.53 (95% CI 1.47-1.58) (21% reduction). Of individuals with cardiometabolic disease, 1736 men (362 234 person-years) and 341 women (179 402 person-years) died from CVD. Education predicted CVD mortality in both sexes. Estimates were reduced with 54% (men) and 33% (women) after adjustment for income and job strain. Conclusion: Low education predicted incident CVD in initially healthy individuals and CVD mortality in individuals with prevalent cardiometabolic disease. In men with cardiometabolic disease, income and job strain explained half of the higher CVD mortality in the low education group. In healthy men and in women regardless of cardiometabolic disease, these factors explained 21-33% of the higher CVD morbidity and mortality.
Bibliographic Details
Oxford University Press (OUP)
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