Boston-area women growing up and living through midlife in socially vulnerable neighborhoods appear to pay a cardiovascular price long before menopause fully arrives, according to a new long-term analysis from the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute. The work follows participants for more than two decades, tracking heart-health patterns from early adult life into the menopausal transition.
Researchers examined 1,200 women in eastern Massachusetts and repeatedly measured cardiovascular status at five time points. Heart health was summarized using a composite score built from eight factors spanning blood pressure, cholesterol-related measures, sleep quality, dietary patterns, and physical activity, among other lifestyle and clinical indicators.
The central result is striking: women residing in the most socially vulnerable neighborhoods scored roughly 6 to 10 points lower across the full follow-up period than women living in the least disadvantaged areas. These differences were not late-breaking—they emerged within about three years of enrollment and persisted as participants moved deeper into midlife.
Importantly, the study also found evidence of faster cardiovascular decline as women approached menopause. That period is widely recognized as a window when cardiometabolic risk can rise, and the new data suggest that neighborhood-level disadvantage may accelerate that trajectory.
The researchers went beyond single snapshots of health. By analyzing repeated observations over time, they assessed how early and sustained social conditions mapped onto longitudinal heart-health trajectories rather than just cross-sectional differences.
Socioeconomic context mattered, too. Lower income and less education were consistently associated with lower heart-health scores throughout the study. In addition, women who identified as Non-Hispanic Black reported persistently lower scores in the observed period.
A key methodological message is that neighborhood effects remained even after accounting for income and education. In other words, place-based exposures—such as environmental stressors, access barriers, and institutional resources—may shape cardiovascular biology beyond measurable personal socioeconomic status.
The authors emphasize that even modest shifts in composite heart-health scores can matter at the population level. Prior research links small declines in similar cardiovascular metrics to higher risks of heart disease and mortality, raising concerns that disparities can compound over decades.
For prevention, the findings point to upstream interventions: improving access to nutritious food, creating safe opportunities for physical activity, and expanding quality healthcare reach—especially during the years before and around menopause.
The study was published in Circulation: Population Health and Outcomes and draws on Project Viva, a pregnancy-to-midlife cohort designed to capture long-range health patterns.
Subject of Research: Cardiovascular health trajectories in midlife women; neighborhood vulnerability and health disparities
Article Title: Associations of Sociodemographic and Neighborhood Vulnerability With Cardiovascular Health in Midlife Women in the United States
News Publication Date: 17-Jul-2026
Web References: https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.126.013433
References: Lin Z, Rifas-Shiman SL, Perng W, Yi L, Manson JE, Joffe H, Hivert MF, Chavarro JE, Aris IM. Circulation: Population Health and Outcomes. 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.126.013433
Image Credits: Not provided
Keywords: heart disease, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, health disparity, health equity, health care policy, menopause, public health

