Psychological stress and cardiovascular risk among women in Brazilian communities: a cross-sectional study

Author:

Mattos Antônio José C.1ORCID,Avezum Alvaro1ORCID,França João Italo D.2ORCID,Izar Maria Cristina O.3ORCID,Ferreira João Fernando M.4ORCID,Drager Luciano Ferreira4ORCID,Saraiva José Francisco K.5ORCID,Fonseca Henrique Andrade R.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sociedade de Cardiologia do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil; Hospital Alemão Oswaldo Cruz, Brazil

2. Instituto Dante Pazanesse, Brasil

3. Sociedade de Cardiologia do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil; Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil

4. Sociedade de Cardiologia do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil; Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

5. Sociedade de Cardiologia do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil; Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Campinas, Brazil

6. Sociedade de Cardiologia do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil; Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, Brazil

Abstract

Abstract: Psychosocial evaluations are rarely conducted with community-dwelling individuals, especially those with higher risk of cardiovascular disease. This study aims to evaluate the perceptual stress and cardiovascular risk among women in a large cross-sectional study performed in Brazilian communities. Subjects aged over 18 years were included out of 500 public basic health units (BHU) in Brazil. All subjects were subjected to a clinical consultation and questionnaires application. Data were used to identify healthy lifestyle, smoking status, and self-perception of psychological stress. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) risk score (NRS) was used to estimate cardiovascular risk. Ethnicity information was self-reported, considering white versus non-white (black, brown, and mixed-race) women. A total of 93,605 patients were recruited from a primary care setting, of which 62,200 (66.4%) were women. Intense and severe auto-perception of stress was higher within non-white women at home (p < 0.001), at work (p = 0.008), socially (p < 0.001), and financially (p < 0.001) compared to white women. Therefore, the NRS indicates that non-white women had higher cardiovascular risk, lower physical activity, and lower daily vegetables/fruits consumption compared to white women (p < 0.001). Non-white women in Brazilian communities are susceptible to increased stress and cardiovascular disease risk, which adds up to disparities in access to the public health system.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

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