A new independent analysis in the Journal of the American Heart Association links state-level socioeconomic conditions with long-term outcomes for adults living with congenital heart disease. Using Global Burden of Disease Study metrics alongside U.S. Census data, researchers assessed patterns from 1990 to 2021 across nearly 300,000 adults aged 20 and older.
The study compares death rates and “disability-adjusted life years,” a measure that combines early mortality with time lived in less healthy states. Investigators then evaluated how these outcomes track with median household income and health insurance coverage reported at the state level.
The central finding is striking: as median household income rises, the death rate for people with congenital heart disease declines. By contrast, the association with the percentage of residents lacking insurance is weaker, suggesting that merely being insured does not necessarily translate into receiving the specialized, lifelong cardiology care that this condition requires.
Researchers argue that geography and care access likely shape these differences. Adult congenital heart disease management depends on expertise that is not evenly distributed, including advanced surveillance, treatment adjustment, and coordinated follow-up as patients age.
Because congenital heart disease care is lifelong, interruptions during key transitions—especially from pediatric services to adult programs—can have lasting consequences. In higher-income states, the authors suggest patients may encounter more adult congenital heart disease cardiologists and more robust care pathways, reducing risk over time.
Insurance coverage may also vary in meaningful ways. The study notes that insurance presence alone may not capture whether plans actually include coverage for specialized heart care, or whether out-of-pocket costs remain prohibitive for ongoing visits and procedures.
The authors conclude that expanding access to expert congenital heart services—particularly in under-resourced regions—could substantially improve survival and quality of life. They also call for better referral systems, increased specialist workforce capacity, and complementary approaches such as telehealth to help bridge distance-based barriers.
As with all observational work, the analysis cannot prove cause and effect, and it cannot directly measure care availability or clinical adherence. Still, the strong relationship between income and mortality supports the idea that structural inequities influence health outcomes in adult congenital heart disease.
The article is published open access and is available through the Journal of the American Heart Association.
Subject of Research: Adult congenital heart disease outcomes and socioeconomic status
Article Title: Associations Between Socioeconomic Status and Adult Congenital Heart Disease Mortality in the U.S.: Insights from the Global Burden of Disease Study
News Publication Date: 15-Jul-2026
Web References: https://www.ahajournals.org/journal/jaha
References: https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/JAHA.125.046919
Image Credits: Not specified
Keywords: congenital heart disease, socioeconomic status, mortality, disability-adjusted life years, health insurance, access to care, adult congenital cardiology, Global Burden of Disease Study, telehealth
Tags: congenital heart disease survivaldisparities in healthcare access and congenitaldisparities in specialized cardiology careglobal burden of disease and heart conditionshealth policy implications for adult congenital heart diseaseimpact of health insurance on adult congenital heart diseaseimportance of lifelong care in congenital heart diseaseinfluence of median household income on health outcomeslong-term outcomes for adults with congenital heart diseaserole of geographic access in heart disease managementsocioeconomic factors and heart disease outcomestransition from pediatric to adult cardiology services



