Sex moderates the relationship between social support and cardiovascular prevention behaviors in middle-aged and older adults

European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

28 July 2023
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Abstract

AbstractFunding Acknowledgements

Type of funding sources: None.

Background

Most risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) are modifiable, suggesting that the burden of CVD could be substantially reduced through cardiovascular screening and healthier lifestyle. People who have social support are found to be more likely to adhere to cardiovascular prevention recommendations, but it is not clear whether the benefit of social support is equal for men and women.

Purpose

To investigate whether sex moderates the relationship between social support and adherence to cardiovascular prevention recommendations in a nationally representative sample.

Method

Participants were 17,287 adults (n=10,264 middle-aged adults 40-64 years old and n=7,023 older adults ≥ 65 years old) who participated in the National Health Survey of Spain in 2017. Social support was measured with the Functional Social Support Questionnaire of Duke-UNC. Adherence to cardiovascular screening recommendations was assessed based on self-reported testing of cholesterol, blood pressure, and blood sugar by a health professional in the past 12 months. Adherence to recommended health-related behaviors was assessed based on the guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology regarding diet, alcohol consumption, smoking, and physical activity.

Results

Multiple regression models adjusted for socio-demographic and cardiovascular history and risk variables showed that social support was more strongly associated with adherence to cardiovascular prevention recommendations in men than in women. In particular, low social support levels were especially detrimental for both middle-aged (screening: B=0.13, 95% CI [0.06-0.20], p<0.001; behaviors: B=0.33 [0.26-0.41], p<0.001) and older men (screening: B=0.10 [0.04-0.17], p = 0.001; behaviors: B=0.16 [0.08-0.25], p<0.001), whereas older women had comparatively high adherence which was unrelated to social support (screening: B=0.02 [-0.03-0.08], p = 0.433; behaviors: B=0.03 [-0.03-0.10], p = 0.342).

Conclusions

Social support is more strongly associated with cardiovascular prevention in men than in women, such that men who lack social support have the lowest adherence to cardiovascular screening and lifestyle recommendations.

Contributors

M Blakoe
M Blakoe

Author

Rigshospitalet - Copenhagen University Hospital Copenhagen , Denmark

A Catena
A Catena

Author

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