Homeless people with mental illness are at high risk for heart disease, a new study suggests.
Canadian researchers found that they
have a 24.5 per cent risk of heart attack, fatal or nonfatal stroke, or
sudden cardiac death over 30 years.
The risk is about 10 percent for a
person of the same age and gender who does not smoke, does not have
diabetes or high blood pressure, and is not overweight, the researchers
noted.
The risk of cardiovascular disease in
homeless people with mental illness was highest among men and those with
substance abuse disorders, according to the study published February 23
in the journal BMC Public Health.
“Many of the factors that we thought
would be associated with the 30-year cardiovascular risk among homeless
adults with mental illness were actually not significant, such as not
having a family doctor or having a diagnosis of psychosis or having a
higher need for mental health services,” said Agnes Gozdzik, a research
associate at the Centre for Research in Inner City Health at St.
Michael’s Hospital in Toronto.
“However, if you are homeless and having
a mental illness and are a male or have a substance use disorder, your
risk of 30-year cardiovascular disease appears to be much higher even if
you may not show the typical other predictors such as high [body-mass
index or high blood pressure], etc.,” she added in a hospital news
release.
“This is something that clinicians who work with this population should be aware of.”
Smoking may be one reason why homeless
people with mental illness have such a high risk of heart disease, the
researchers suggested.
Research shows that both homeless and mentally ill people have high rates of smoking.
According to some estimates, as many as
90 per cent of people with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder smoke, as
do about 70 per cent of people with a major depressive disorder. The
smoking rate in the general population is about 20 per cent, the news
release says.
Heart disease is a leading cause of death among all homeless people, the authors noted.
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