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Heart and
stroke death rates steadily decline; risks
still too high
DALLAS, Jan. 22 – In an
appropriate prelude to American Heart Month,
which is just ahead in February, new
mortality data from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that,
since 1999, coronary heart disease and
stroke age-adjusted death rates are down by
25.8 percent and 24.4 percent,
respectively.
This means that the
American Heart Association’s 2010 strategic
goal for reducing deaths from coronary heart
disease has been achieved, and for stroke
nearly achieved – ahead of time.
However, potential
problems loom for the future, as all of the
major risk factors for these leading causes
of death are still too high and several are
actually on the rise. If this trend
continues, death rates could begin to rise
again in years ahead.
In 1999, the American Heart Association set
a strategic goal of reducing the death rates
from coronary heart disease and stroke, and
reducing the risk factors for these diseases
by 25 percent by 2010.
The new CDC data notes
early success in meeting the coronary heart
disease death rate goal, and shows that
success is near for the 25 percent reduction
in stroke. However, American Heart
Association president Dan Jones, M.D., said
the victory could be short-lived if the risk
factors that lead to heart disease and
stroke are not also reduced.
“This progress in the
reduction of death rates is a landmark
achievement, and has come about as a result
of tremendous efforts from many partners in
research, healthcare, government, business
and communities,” Jones said.
“As encouraging as it
is, heart disease and stroke remain the No.
1 and No. 3 causes of death in the United
States. We still have remaining goals that
we haven’t yet met – reductions in the risk
factors that lead to heart disease and
stroke, as well as eliminating the striking
disparities in care for women and minority
populations. We must continue to address
those concerns at the same time we continue
to support the advances that we know are
saving lives today.”
The reduction in the
death rates for coronary heart disease and
stroke equates to approximately 160,000
lives saved in 2005 (the most recent year
for which data is available) compared to the
1999 baseline data.
If the current
mortality trends hold (which will not be the
case if the current trends in risk factors
are not improved and current quality of care
improvements do not continue), the American
Heart Association analysts projects that
there may be a 36 percent decline in the
age-adjusted coronary heart disease death
rate and a 34 percent decline in the
age-adjusted stroke death rate when the 2008
data are released in a few years (in
comparison with the 1999 data).
The population
size in 2008 will also be larger, so it is
projected that the estimated lives saved in
2008 will be approximately 240,000.
Multiple factors appear
to have led to the reduction in deaths.
Ongoing scientific research has led to
improvements in medications and in
technology.
The development of
evidence-based practice guidelines has
helped healthcare providers know what is
effective both for the treatment and
prevention of heart attacks and
strokes. Some of the advances are complex
and others are quite simple, though
important.
“We know that getting
patients to the hospital quickly for the
appropriate treatment is crucial to saving
lives. We know that timely angioplasty to
open blocked coronary arteries, or
thrombolysis when primary angioplasty is not
available or appropriate, is making a
difference.
"The
development of more hospitals into primary
stroke centers and providing more rapid and
better care for stroke victims have all made
positive impacts,” Jones said.
“Improving the quality
of care through the dissemination of
evidence-based clinical guidelines can help
patients benefit from the research that we
and others have supported, helping them live
longer and reducing their risk of a second
heart attack or stroke.
"The
American Heart Association’s Get With The
Guidelines hospital-based quality
improvement program initiative, which now
includes more than a million patient
records, is just one way we continue to
translate scientific knowledge into
day-to-day practice.”
Among those practice
measures making a difference is better
control of blood pressure and cholesterol
levels, both with lifestyle change and with
medications.
In addition, a variety
of strategies to reduce smoking in this
country have made a difference, including
tobacco excise taxes, clean indoor air
legislation and smoking cessation efforts.
But not everyone is receiving the proven
medicines and treatments that save lives.
Coronary heart disease
age-adjusted death rates for women have
dropped 26.9 percent since 1999.
But, age-adjusted
stroke death rates among women are down by
only 23.7 percent, lower than the overall
age-adjusted stroke death rate reduction and
the age-adjusted stoke death rate reduction
for men, which is 25.8 percent.
The age-adjusted death
rate for blacks is down 23.8 percent for
coronary heart disease (compared to 25.6
percent for whites) and 20.3 percent for
stroke (compared to 25 percent for whites.)
These disparities in
the outcomes for women and minority
populations are echoed in the statistics for
those living in certain parts of the
country, such as the Stroke Belt in the
South, and for those with lower income
levels.
“These disparities are
unacceptable,” Jones said. “We are actively
seeking ways to better address these issues
so that we can ensure that every person has
the appropriate care they need to live a
healthier, longer life.”
He said this will
require reaching the American Heart
Association goals for reducing the major
modifiable risk factors for heart disease
and stroke.
Those include
hypertension, high blood cholesterol,
obesity, diabetes, physical inactivity and
tobacco use. Because of progress in
research, each of these risk factors can be
controlled to goal levels for nearly
everyone with either lifestyle changes alone
or lifestyle combined with medications.
However, the data show
that while there is progress on some of
these risk factors, others are not being
reduced nearly enough.
The number of people
with uncontrolled hypertension has fallen by
16 percent since the American Heart
Association set its 25 percent 2010
strategic goals. The number of people with
elevated blood cholesterol is down 19.2
percent and tobacco use is down 15.4
percent.
Perhaps most alarming,
the rate of physical inactivity has only
declined by 2.5 percent and the prevalence
rates for obesity and type II diabetes are
actually increasing, and are appearing at
earlier ages than ever before.
“We’re working on this,
but much more needs to be done,” Jones
pointed out. “If we don’t make a concerted
effort to reduce these risks, we will lose
the momentum we celebrate today.
:We
will see our children developing heart
disease earlier, experiencing early deaths
or needing major medical care sooner. The
financial and, more importantly, the
emotional toll is too great.”
“We are pleased with
the progress this new data shows, but we
know we can do much more,” Jones said.
“We need to continue to
push for more research and new medical
advances, along with improved adherence to
our practice guidelines.
"Most
importantly, we must make it a priority to
institute lifestyle and behavior changes,
and the patient-healthcare provider
partnership that can control risk factors
and reduce the risk of developing
cardiovascular disease in the first place.”
The 2005 mortality
report can be accessed at
www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr56/nvsr56_10.pdf.
For more information on heart disease and
stroke deaths and risk factors, visit
www.americanheart.org.
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