Positive factors in youth linked to better heart health later in life

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Children with favorable psychosocial experiences may have better cardiovascular health in adulthood.
Credit: © spotmatikphoto / Fotolia

Children with favorable psychosocial experiences may have better cardiovascular health in adulthood, according to new research in the American Heart Association journal Circulation.

Positive psychosocial factors include growing up in a family that practices healthy habits, is financially secured, is a stable emotional environment, and where children learn to control aggressiveness and impulsiveness and fit in socially.

In a Finnish study, participants with the most psychosocial advantages in youth scored higher on an ideal cardiovascular health index in adulthood than those with the least psychosocial advantages.

To calculate “ideal cardiovascular health,” researchers used the American Heart Association’s Life’s Simple 7: being active, controlling cholesterol, eating healthy, controlling blood pressure, losing weight, reducing blood sugar and stopping smoking.

Results from the study revealed those with the most psychosocial advantages in childhood had:

  • 14 percent greater chance of being at normal weight as an adult;
  • 12 percent greater chance of being a non-smoker as an adult; and
  • 11 percent greater chance to have a healthy glucose level as an adult.

“The choices parents make have a long-lasting effect on their children’s future health, and improvement in any one thing can have measurable benefits,” said Laura Pulkki-Råback, Ph.D., study senior author and research fellow at the University of Helsinki in Finland. “For instance, if an unemployed parent gets steady employment, the effect may be huge. If he or she also quits smoking, the benefit is even greater. All efforts to improve family well-being are beneficial.”

Researchers initiated the project with 3,577 children ranging in age from 3-18. They measured six factors: socioeconomic status, emotional stability, parental health behaviors, stressful events, self-regulation of behavioral problems and social adjustment. Twenty-seven years later, researchers assessed 1,089 of the participants 30-45 years old to determine their level of ideal cardiovascular health.

Favorable socioeconomic status and self-regulatory behavior, meaning good aggression and impulse control, in youth were the strongest predictors of ideal cardiovascular health in adulthood.

Early experiences appear to have cardiovascular health benefits for all people. The results also highlight the importance of early life stages — periods during which other studies have proven cardiovascular diseases begin to root.

“Scientific evidence supports the fact that investing in the well-being of children and families will be cost effective in the long run because it decreases healthcare costs at the other end of life (old age),” she said. “The knowledge is out there, and now it is a question of values and priorities.”


Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by American Heart Association. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. L. Pulkki-Raback, M. Elovainio, C. Hakulinen, J. Lipsanen, M. Hintsanen, M. Jokela, L. D. Kubzansky, T. Hintsa, A. Serlachius, T. T. Laitinen, K. Pahkala, V. Mikkila, J. Nevalainen, N. Hutri-Kahonen, M. Juonala, J. Viikari, O. Raitakari, L. Keltikangas-Jarvinen. Cumulative Effect of Psychosocial Factors in Youth on Ideal Cardiovascular Health in Adulthood: The Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study. Circulation, 2015; DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.007104