Abstract

Introduction: Social determinants of health (SDH) can have a significant impact on the risk of hypertension related hospitalization. Understanding the drivers of potentially preventable hospitalizations for hypertension improves health outcomes and reduce associated costs. Identifying place and associated SDH has implications for tailored interventions to address disparities for high burden population for preventable hypertension hospitalization as hypertension and associated cardiovascular disease. Methods: County level preventable hospitalization rates for hypertension for Virginia was obtained using prevention quality indicators published by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The Health Opportunity Index (HOI), developed by the Virginia Department of Health to identify vulnerable populations is a multivariate tool that uses complex SDH indicators of a community and comprises of 13 indices - affordability, income inequality, Townsend/Material deprivation, job participation, employment access, education, air quality, segregation, food accessibility, population density, population churning, walkability, and access to care. Principal component analysis was used to develop the composite HOI and further aggregated into simple quintiles at the county level. Step-wise multiple regression analysis was performed to explore SDH and preventable hospitalization for hypertension. Results: Material deprivation index ( r = -.44), affordability index ( r = -.42) and air quality index ( r = -.23) were found to be significantly associated with preventable hospitalization rate for hypertension. Together the model accounted for 23% of the variability in the preventable hypertension hospitalization rate ( p > 0.05). Conclusions: Findings indicate that neighborhoods that spend most on housing and transportation and that are materially deprived of goods, services, amenities and resources and physical environment have higher rates of preventable hospitalization for hypertension. Areas with higher air pollution may result in hypertension. Addressing these disparities by targeted approach is one possible approach to reducing the burden of preventable hospitalization for hypertension in Virginia.

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