Habitual sleep duration and its relationship with cardiovascular health, healthcare costs, and resource utilization in a working population
Aneni E, Osondu C, Joseph J, Saeed G, Valero-Elizondo J, Veledar E, Nasir K. Habitual sleep duration and its relationship with cardiovascular health, healthcare costs, and resource utilization in a working population. Sleep Health 2022, 9: 77-85. PMID: 36371382, PMCID: PMC9991949, DOI: 10.1016/j.sleh.2022.10.001.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultCardiovascular DiseasesFloridaHealth Care CostsHumansRisk AssessmentSleep DurationConceptsCardiovascular healthHabitual sleep durationSleep durationHealthcare expendituresHealthcare costsOptimal cardiovascular healthIdeal cardiovascular healthBaptist Health South FloridaHealthcare resource utilizationBody mass indexBetter cardiovascular healthMedical claims dataHours of sleepLower healthcare expendituresCVH metricsMore hoursBlood pressureMass indexMean ageEmergency roomCardiovascular diseaseHigher oddsHispanic ethnicityPhysical activityClaims dataEstimates of Mortality Benefit From Ideal Cardiovascular Health Metrics: A Dose Response Meta‐Analysis
Aneni EC, Crippa A, Osondu CU, Valero‐Elizondo J, Younus A, Nasir K, Veledar E. Estimates of Mortality Benefit From Ideal Cardiovascular Health Metrics: A Dose Response Meta‐Analysis. Journal Of The American Heart Association 2017, 6: e006904. PMID: 29269350, PMCID: PMC5779012, DOI: 10.1161/jaha.117.006904.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsIdeal cardiovascular healthIdeal CVH metricsPooled hazard ratioCVH metricsCardiovascular healthMortality benefitHazard ratioCardiovascular disease-related mortalityDose–response meta analysisStrong public health messageIdeal cardiovascular health metricsSubstantial mortality benefitCardiovascular health metricsCardiovascular disease mortalityLinear dose-response relationshipDisease-related mortalityPublic health messagesHazard ratio estimatesDose-response relationshipUnit increaseWeb of ScienceCause mortalityInternet literature searchDisease mortalityCardiovascular disease