Cardiovascular Health in Rural Communities: Study Reveals Impacts of Social Factors
Cardiovascular Health in Rural Communities: Study Reveals Impacts of Social Factors
Cardiovascular Health in Rural Communities: Study Reveals Impacts of Social Factors
Apr 1, 2025
Apr 1, 2025

Illustrative image. Credit: Superhomo via Canva.
Illustrative image. Credit: Superhomo via Canva.
Study shows that adults in rural areas of the United States face more cardiovascular problems due to social factors, not just limited access to healthcare. Learn what this means.
Study shows that adults in rural areas of the United States face more cardiovascular problems due to social factors, not just limited access to healthcare. Learn what this means.
A study published in JAMA Cardiology on March 31, 2025, analyzed data from more than 27,000 adults in the United States and revealed a worrying reality: residents of rural areas suffer more from heart disease than those living in urban centers.
Contrary to popular belief, the main driver isn’t limited access to doctors or hospitals. The analysis indicates that social conditions—such as poverty, food access, and educational attainment—weigh even more heavily in these disparities.
Young Rural Adults Face Even Greater Risks
Participants were divided into three groups: rural areas (14 %), small to midsize metropolitan areas (54.8 %), and large urban areas (31.2 %). Results show that adults in rural zones have higher rates of hypertension, high cholesterol, obesity, diabetes, and heart disease compared to urban residents. For example, the prevalence of hypertension in rural areas was 37.1 % versus 30.9 % in urban areas—a 20 % higher relative risk.
The study also pointed out meaningful inequalities among individuals aged 20 to 39. In this age group, the risk of hypertension was 44 % higher in rural zones, while the risk of obesity was 54 % greater. The most alarming finding was diabetes: Young rural adults faced a 2.5 times higher risk than their urban peers, indicating these conditions are affecting populations at ever-earlier ages.
Social Factors Explain Much of the Disparities
Even after adjustments that accounted for healthcare access—such as having health insurance or a regular doctor—the differences persisted. The same was true for behavioral factors like smoking or physical inactivity, which also failed to explain the results.
When researchers factored in social determinants, however, they observed a dramatic reduction in disparities. Issues such as educational level, food insecurity, poverty, and home ownership proved decisive. Once these aspects were considered, differences in hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease nearly vanished. Obesity remained the only condition with a residual gap, albeit much reduced.
Pathways to Improving Health in Rural Communities
The study emphasizes that improving healthcare access, while significant, isn’t sufficient. Long-term structural investments are needed, focusing on:
Quality education
Poverty reduction
Ensuring food security
Such measures guarantee that rural populations have the same health opportunities as city dwellers. Addressing the social roots of these inequalities is paramount; otherwise, cardiovascular problems will continue to affect millions of people in America's heartland.
—
Want to explore more findings from this research? Read the original article here.
A study published in JAMA Cardiology on March 31, 2025, analyzed data from more than 27,000 adults in the United States and revealed a worrying reality: residents of rural areas suffer more from heart disease than those living in urban centers.
Contrary to popular belief, the main driver isn’t limited access to doctors or hospitals. The analysis indicates that social conditions—such as poverty, food access, and educational attainment—weigh even more heavily in these disparities.
Young Rural Adults Face Even Greater Risks
Participants were divided into three groups: rural areas (14 %), small to midsize metropolitan areas (54.8 %), and large urban areas (31.2 %). Results show that adults in rural zones have higher rates of hypertension, high cholesterol, obesity, diabetes, and heart disease compared to urban residents. For example, the prevalence of hypertension in rural areas was 37.1 % versus 30.9 % in urban areas—a 20 % higher relative risk.
The study also pointed out meaningful inequalities among individuals aged 20 to 39. In this age group, the risk of hypertension was 44 % higher in rural zones, while the risk of obesity was 54 % greater. The most alarming finding was diabetes: Young rural adults faced a 2.5 times higher risk than their urban peers, indicating these conditions are affecting populations at ever-earlier ages.
Social Factors Explain Much of the Disparities
Even after adjustments that accounted for healthcare access—such as having health insurance or a regular doctor—the differences persisted. The same was true for behavioral factors like smoking or physical inactivity, which also failed to explain the results.
When researchers factored in social determinants, however, they observed a dramatic reduction in disparities. Issues such as educational level, food insecurity, poverty, and home ownership proved decisive. Once these aspects were considered, differences in hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease nearly vanished. Obesity remained the only condition with a residual gap, albeit much reduced.
Pathways to Improving Health in Rural Communities
The study emphasizes that improving healthcare access, while significant, isn’t sufficient. Long-term structural investments are needed, focusing on:
Quality education
Poverty reduction
Ensuring food security
Such measures guarantee that rural populations have the same health opportunities as city dwellers. Addressing the social roots of these inequalities is paramount; otherwise, cardiovascular problems will continue to affect millions of people in America's heartland.
—
Want to explore more findings from this research? Read the original article here.
A study published in JAMA Cardiology on March 31, 2025, analyzed data from more than 27,000 adults in the United States and revealed a worrying reality: residents of rural areas suffer more from heart disease than those living in urban centers.
Contrary to popular belief, the main driver isn’t limited access to doctors or hospitals. The analysis indicates that social conditions—such as poverty, food access, and educational attainment—weigh even more heavily in these disparities.
Young Rural Adults Face Even Greater Risks
Participants were divided into three groups: rural areas (14 %), small to midsize metropolitan areas (54.8 %), and large urban areas (31.2 %). Results show that adults in rural zones have higher rates of hypertension, high cholesterol, obesity, diabetes, and heart disease compared to urban residents. For example, the prevalence of hypertension in rural areas was 37.1 % versus 30.9 % in urban areas—a 20 % higher relative risk.
The study also pointed out meaningful inequalities among individuals aged 20 to 39. In this age group, the risk of hypertension was 44 % higher in rural zones, while the risk of obesity was 54 % greater. The most alarming finding was diabetes: Young rural adults faced a 2.5 times higher risk than their urban peers, indicating these conditions are affecting populations at ever-earlier ages.
Social Factors Explain Much of the Disparities
Even after adjustments that accounted for healthcare access—such as having health insurance or a regular doctor—the differences persisted. The same was true for behavioral factors like smoking or physical inactivity, which also failed to explain the results.
When researchers factored in social determinants, however, they observed a dramatic reduction in disparities. Issues such as educational level, food insecurity, poverty, and home ownership proved decisive. Once these aspects were considered, differences in hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease nearly vanished. Obesity remained the only condition with a residual gap, albeit much reduced.
Pathways to Improving Health in Rural Communities
The study emphasizes that improving healthcare access, while significant, isn’t sufficient. Long-term structural investments are needed, focusing on:
Quality education
Poverty reduction
Ensuring food security
Such measures guarantee that rural populations have the same health opportunities as city dwellers. Addressing the social roots of these inequalities is paramount; otherwise, cardiovascular problems will continue to affect millions of people in America's heartland.
—
Want to explore more findings from this research? Read the original article here.

Share on:
See Also
See Also
Microplastics Detected in Ovarian Fluid: What Does This Mean for Human Fertility?
Apr 22, 2025
Humanitarian Crisis in Myanmar: Millions Need Aid After Devastating Earthquakes
Apr 21, 2025
Life on Another Planet? Life-Linked Gas Detected on Exoplanet K2-18b
Apr 18, 2025
Dire Wolves Recreated? Meet the Genetically Modified Animals from Colossal Biosciences
Apr 11, 2025
Digital Security and Artificial Intelligence: Solutions and Challenges in 2025
Apr 3, 2025
Cardiovascular Health in Rural Communities: Study Reveals Impacts of Social Factors
Apr 1, 2025
Unexpected Heat Marks the First Day of Spring 2025 in the United Kingdom: A Sign of Climate Change?
Mar 21, 2025
DeepSeek AI: The Chinese Chatbot That Is Shaking Up the Global Market
Feb 7, 2025
Study Reveals That an Active Social Life Can Reduce Dementia Risk
Feb 4, 2025
Lunar New Year 2025: The Arrival of the Year of the Snake
Jan 30, 2025
New Hypothesis on the Origin of Dinosaurs Challenges Traditional Concepts
Jan 27, 2025
Emotions and the Human Body: Millennia-Old Connections in Neo-Assyrian Texts
Dec 20, 2024
Study Links Air Pollution to Risk of Venous Thromboembolism
Dec 20, 2024
Potentially Habitable Environment on Mars Discovered by Perseverance
Dec 20, 2024
Collapse of the Conger Ice Shelf: Alert for East Antarctica
Dec 20, 2024
Revolution XRISM: New Discoveries About Supermassive Black Holes
Oct 15, 2024
Study Shows that Duplication of the AMY1 Gene, Related to Starch Digestion, Predates Agriculture
Oct 14, 2024
Births in the EU Fall Below 4 Million for the First Time Since 1960
Oct 11, 2024
Excavation in Denmark Reveals 50 Incredibly Preserved Viking Skeletons
Oct 10, 2024
Study Indicates Higher Incidence of Asthma and Allergic Rhinitis in People Born in Autumn and Winter in Finland
Oct 9, 2024
Study Demonstrates Similarities Between Ice Age Adolescents' Puberty and Modern Youth
Oct 8, 2024
DNA Analysis in 3,600-Year-Old Chinese Mummies Reveals World's Oldest Cheese
Oct 7, 2024
Study Reveals Genetic Stability of Southern African Populations Over 10 Millennia
Oct 4, 2024
Nine Mythical Places That May Have Existed, According to Archaeological Discoveries
Oct 3, 2024
How Human Rights Can Save Coral Reefs and Hold Governments Accountable
Oct 2, 2024
Carbon Brief Report Indicates 2024 Could Be the Hottest Year on Record
Sep 4, 2024
Climate Determines Mammal Distribution, Reveals Study by North Carolina State University
Sep 4, 2024
Study Suggests Fossil 'Hotspots' in Africa Distort Our View of Human Evolution
Sep 3, 2024
Unusual Noise on Boeing's Starliner Puzzles NASA Astronaut
Sep 3, 2024
Study Reveals Human Microbiome is Highly Individualized
Sep 2, 2024

Share on:

Share on:
Microplastics Detected in Ovarian Fluid: What Does This Mean for Human Fertility?
Apr 22, 2025
Humanitarian Crisis in Myanmar: Millions Need Aid After Devastating Earthquakes
Apr 21, 2025
Life on Another Planet? Life-Linked Gas Detected on Exoplanet K2-18b
Apr 18, 2025
Dire Wolves Recreated? Meet the Genetically Modified Animals from Colossal Biosciences
Apr 11, 2025
Digital Security and Artificial Intelligence: Solutions and Challenges in 2025
Apr 3, 2025
Cardiovascular Health in Rural Communities: Study Reveals Impacts of Social Factors
Apr 1, 2025
Unexpected Heat Marks the First Day of Spring 2025 in the United Kingdom: A Sign of Climate Change?
Mar 21, 2025
DeepSeek AI: The Chinese Chatbot That Is Shaking Up the Global Market
Feb 7, 2025
Study Reveals That an Active Social Life Can Reduce Dementia Risk
Feb 4, 2025
Lunar New Year 2025: The Arrival of the Year of the Snake
Jan 30, 2025
New Hypothesis on the Origin of Dinosaurs Challenges Traditional Concepts
Jan 27, 2025
Emotions and the Human Body: Millennia-Old Connections in Neo-Assyrian Texts
Dec 20, 2024
Study Links Air Pollution to Risk of Venous Thromboembolism
Dec 20, 2024
Potentially Habitable Environment on Mars Discovered by Perseverance
Dec 20, 2024
Collapse of the Conger Ice Shelf: Alert for East Antarctica
Dec 20, 2024
Revolution XRISM: New Discoveries About Supermassive Black Holes
Oct 15, 2024
Study Shows that Duplication of the AMY1 Gene, Related to Starch Digestion, Predates Agriculture
Oct 14, 2024
Births in the EU Fall Below 4 Million for the First Time Since 1960
Oct 11, 2024
Excavation in Denmark Reveals 50 Incredibly Preserved Viking Skeletons
Oct 10, 2024
Study Indicates Higher Incidence of Asthma and Allergic Rhinitis in People Born in Autumn and Winter in Finland
Oct 9, 2024
Study Demonstrates Similarities Between Ice Age Adolescents' Puberty and Modern Youth
Oct 8, 2024
DNA Analysis in 3,600-Year-Old Chinese Mummies Reveals World's Oldest Cheese
Oct 7, 2024
Study Reveals Genetic Stability of Southern African Populations Over 10 Millennia
Oct 4, 2024
Nine Mythical Places That May Have Existed, According to Archaeological Discoveries
Oct 3, 2024
How Human Rights Can Save Coral Reefs and Hold Governments Accountable
Oct 2, 2024
Carbon Brief Report Indicates 2024 Could Be the Hottest Year on Record
Sep 4, 2024
Climate Determines Mammal Distribution, Reveals Study by North Carolina State University
Sep 4, 2024
Study Suggests Fossil 'Hotspots' in Africa Distort Our View of Human Evolution
Sep 3, 2024
Unusual Noise on Boeing's Starliner Puzzles NASA Astronaut
Sep 3, 2024
Study Reveals Human Microbiome is Highly Individualized
Sep 2, 2024