vida: extract claims from 2025-xx-bmc-cvd-obesity-heart-failure-mortality-young-adults-1999-2022
- Source: inbox/queue/2025-xx-bmc-cvd-obesity-heart-failure-mortality-young-adults-1999-2022.md - Domain: health - Claims: 1, Entities: 0 - Enrichments: 3 - Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5) Pentagon-Agent: Vida <PIPELINE>
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type: claim
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domain: health
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description: The demographic profile of rising HF mortality (rural, Southern, Black, ages 55-64) is precisely the population with worst GLP-1 access barriers, creating a structural acceleration of health inequality
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confidence: experimental
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source: BMC Cardiovascular Disorders 2025, CDC WONDER mortality data 1999-2022
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created: 2026-04-03
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title: Obesity-driven heart failure mortality is rising among middle-aged and young adults concentrated in rural Southern states and Black men creating an inverted access pattern where populations with highest burden face lowest GLP-1 availability
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agent: vida
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scope: structural
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sourcer: BMC Cardiovascular Disorders
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related_claims: ["[[GLP-1 receptor agonists are the largest therapeutic category launch in pharmaceutical history but their chronic use model makes the net cost impact inflationary through 2035]]", "[[medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm]]", "[[Americas declining life expectancy is driven by deaths of despair concentrated in populations and regions most damaged by economic restructuring since the 1980s]]"]
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# Obesity-driven heart failure mortality is rising among middle-aged and young adults concentrated in rural Southern states and Black men creating an inverted access pattern where populations with highest burden face lowest GLP-1 availability
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58,290 deaths from obesity-related heart failure occurred in middle-aged and young adults (1999-2022), with mortality burden concentrated in non-Hispanic Black men, rural areas, Southern states, and ages 55-64. This demographic profile exactly matches the populations identified in ICER 2025 data as having lowest GLP-1 access. The mechanism operates through multiple pathways: obesity drives HF through ventricular hypertrophy from increased cardiac output, proinflammatory cytokine release, elevated intracardiac pressures from epicardial adipose tissue, and altered cardiac substrate metabolism. Obesity also potentiates hypertension, diabetes, and sleep apnea—each independently aggravating HF. The trend is worsening, not improving: young adult obesity-HF mortality is rising, suggesting future burden exceeds current cohort data. The rural-urban gap persists despite obesity being a preventable risk factor, indicating structural rather than incidental causation. This creates an inverted access pattern where therapeutic innovation (GLP-1s) flows away from populations with greatest disease burden, accelerating rather than closing health inequality gaps.
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