Study Finds Chinese Youth Not Engaging in Heart Healthy Habits

Many children and adolescents in China may have less than ideal cardiovascular health, including low rates of physical activity and unhealthy diet, according to a study published Feb. 15 in JACC: Asia. Socioeconomic factors including sex, education, family history of cardiovascular disease and geographic location contribute to the lower overall percentage of youth engaging in positive heart healthy behaviors.

In one of the first studies of its kind, researchers looked at pre-defined ideal cardiovascular health behaviors in children and adolescents to determine overall cardiovascular health and associations between heart health and sociodemographic factors. Data from over 15,000 participants aged 7-17 years old who were part of a Chinese national intervention program against obesity were analyzed using four health behaviors: nonsmoking, body mass index, physical activity and diet, and three health factors: total cholesterol, blood pressure and fasting plasma glucose to determine cardiovascular health status.

Researchers found that only 1.9% of males and 1.6% of females had ideal cardiovascular health status. When broken down by components of health status, 3.3% of males and 3% of females exhibited ideal cardiovascular health behaviors and 52.4% of males and 54.9% of females exhibited ideal health factors. Fasting plasma glucose was the most highly prevalent health factor (94.4% of males and 97.4% of females), and ideal physical activity and diet had the lowest percentage (34.6% and 28.3% for males and 23.9% and 30.1% for females, respectively). Females, younger children, those in areas with undeveloped economies, those in the southern region and those with no family history of cardiovascular disease were associated with more ideal cardiovascular health metrics.

The researchers also found the greatest discrepancy in determining ideal smoking status when they accounted for passive smoking. The rate of nonsmoking in children and adolescents was 98.7%; however, when factoring the passive smoking, that percentage dropped by more than half.

The researchers said they recommend strategies such as household smoking control, eliminating food deserts in undeveloped regions of the country, programs to monitor and promote physical activity, and more studies to further explore how sociodemographic determinants impact cardiovascular health.

“Overall, we found that the prevalence of meeting all seven ideal metrics or all four ideal health behaviors was alarmingly low,” said Jin Jing, MD, PhD, senior author of the study. “The findings among youths would be important for developing cardiovascular health promotion strategies.”

In an accompanying editorial comment, Jing Liu, MD, PhD, said the research shows that the situation is alarming. “These findings clearly indicate that the majority of the Chinese children and adolescents did not meet optimal levels of cardiovascular health. Without effective interventions to promote cardiovascular health and reduce health disparities in early life, the success in improving the status of cardiovascular health in adulthood and reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease in the near future seems uncertain.”

Clinical Topics: Congenital Heart Disease and Pediatric Cardiology, Diabetes and Cardiometabolic Disease, Dyslipidemia, Prevention, CHD and Pediatrics and Prevention, CHD and Pediatrics and Quality Improvement, Lipid Metabolism, Nonstatins, Exercise, Smoking

Keywords: ACC International, Obesity, Health Promotion, Socioeconomic Factors, China, Cholesterol, Smoking, Exercise, Health Behavior, Health Status, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Blood Pressure, Body Mass Index, Cardiovascular Diseases, Tobacco Smoke Pollution, Blood Glucose, Adolescent, Child


< Back to Listings