An index of unhealthy lifestyle is associated with coronary heart disease mortality rates for small areas in England after adjustment for deprivation.

Scarborough P, Allender S, Rayner M, Goldacre M

Indices of socio-economic deprivation are often used as a proxy for differences in the health behaviours of populations within small areas, but these indices are a measure of the economic environment rather than the health environment. Sets of synthetic estimates of the ward-level prevalence of low fruit and vegetable consumption, obesity, raised blood pressure, raised cholesterol and smoking were combined to develop an index of unhealthy lifestyle. Multi-level regression models showed that this index described about 50% of the large-scale geographic variation in CHD mortality rates in England, and substantially adds to the ability of an index of deprivation to explain geographic variations in CHD mortality rates.

Keywords:

Adult

,

Coronary Disease

,

Diet

,

England

,

Female

,

Humans

,

Hypercholesterolemia

,

Hypertension

,

Life Style

,

Male

,

Obesity

,

Poverty Areas

,

Prevalence

,

Regression Analysis

,

Risk Factors

,

Small-Area Analysis

,

Smoking