A cohort study comparing cardiovascular risk factors in rural Maori, urban Maori and non-Maori communities in New Zealand.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
To understand health disparities in cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the indigenous Māori of New Zealand, diagnosed and undiagnosed
CVD risk factors were compared in rural Māori in an area remote from health services with urban Māori and non-Māori in a city
well served with health services.
DESIGN
Prospective cohort study.
SETTING
Hauora Manawa is a cohort study of diagnosed and previously undiagnosed CVD, diabetes and risk factors, based on random selection
from electoral rolls of the rural Wairoa District and Christchurch City, New Zealand.
PARTICIPANTS
Screening clinics were attended by 252 rural Māori, 243 urban Māori and 256 urban non-Māori, aged 20-64 years.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
The study documented personal and family medical history, blood pressure, anthropometrics, fasting lipids, insulin, glucose,
HbA1c and urate to identify risk factors in common and those that differ among the three communities.
RESULTS
Mean age (SD) was 45.7 (11.5) versus 42.6 (11.2) versus 43.6 (11.5) years in rural Māori, urban Māori and non-Māori, respectively.
Age-adjusted rates of diagnosed cardiac disease were not significantly different across the cohorts (7.5% vs 5.8% vs 2.8%,
p=0.073). However, rural Māori had significantly higher levels of type-2 diabetes (10.7% vs 3.7% vs 2.4%, p<0.001), diagnosed
hypertension (25.0% vs 14.9% vs 10.7%, p<0.001), treated dyslipidaemia (15.7% vs 7.1% vs 2.8%, p<0.001), current smoking (42.8%
vs 30.5% vs 15.2%, p<0.001) and age-adjusted body mass index (30.7 (7.3) vs 29.1 (6.4) vs 26.1 (4.5) kg/m(2), p<0.001). Similarly
high rates of previously undocumented elevated blood pressure (22.2% vs 23.5% vs 17.6%, p=0.235) and high cholesterol (42.1%
vs 54.3% vs 42.2%, p=0.008) were observed across all cohorts.
CONCLUSIONS
Supporting integrated rural healthcare to provide screening and management of CVD risk factors would reduce health disparities
in this indigenous population.
Links
Authors
Cameron VA, Faatoese AF, Gillies MW, Robertson PJ, Huria TM, Doughty RN, Whalley GA, Richards MA, Troughton RW, Tikao-Mason KN, Wells EJ, Sheerin IG, Pitama SG
Institution
Christchurch Heart Institute, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Source
BMJ open 2:3 2012 pgPub Type(s)
Journal ArticleLanguage
eng
PubMed ID
22685219
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