# Biological Indicators of Cardiovascular Health by Foster Care History in Adults

**Authors:** Darlynn M. Rojo-Wissar, Sean R. Womack, Tomas Baka, Adam P. Spira, Ryan D. Davidson, Eric S. Zhou, Candice A. Alfano, Chandra L. Jackson, Michael A. Grandner, Stephanie H. Parade

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2025.108097 · American journal of preventive medicine · 2025-11-01

## TL;DR

Adults who were in foster care as children have worse cardiovascular health, especially higher blood pressure, compared to those without foster care history.

## Contribution

This study identifies cardiovascular health disparities in U.S. adults with a foster care history using nationally representative data.

## Key findings

- Foster care alumni had lower overall cardiovascular health scores compared to non-alumni.
- Foster care alumni had notably lower blood pressure health scores, indicating hypertension.
- Protective factors like higher income did not reduce cardiovascular risks in foster care alumni.

## Abstract

Childhood adversity contributes to adult cardiovascular health disparities, but the cardiovascular health of foster care alumni, who experience unique compounded stressors such as attachment disruption and environmental upheaval, is understudied. In this study, biological cardiovascular health indicators were described among U.S. adults with and without a foster care placement history.

Cross-sectional data from 4,625 adults (representing 17,226,361 U.S. adults) approaching and in early midlife (2016–2018) from The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health were used. Biological indicators of cardiovascular health included BMI, blood lipids, blood glucose, and blood pressure, which were each scored on a standardized scale of 0–100, with higher scores indicating better cardiovascular health. An unweighted average of these standardized scores was also computed. Incorporating sampling weights, nationally representative estimates of cardiovascular health by foster care history were generated in 2024–2025.

There were 113 participants who reported a foster care placement history (1.8% [weighted]), representing 313,604 adults. Foster care alumni had poorer overall cardiovascular health scores (mean=61.8, 95% CI=56.6, 66.9) and blood pressure health scores (mean=48.7 [indicates hypertension], 95% CI=39.8, 57.5) than those without a foster care history (cardiovascular health: mean=70.2, 95% CI=69.1, 71.4; blood pressure: mean=61.6, 95% CI=59.9, 63.2). Notably, common protective factors (e.g., female sex, higher income) did not mitigate cardiovascular health risk in the foster care group.

Childhood foster care placement is associated with poorer cardiovascular health, particularly hypertension, even in groups generally at lower risk. Research and clinical initiatives are needed to better understand and address cardiovascular health inequities and promote cardiovascular wellness in this population.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CVH (MESH:D002318), hypertension (MESH:D006973)
- **Chemicals:** lipids (MESH:D008055), glucose (MESH:D005947)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12577747/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12577747