Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.

Given recent slowing of declines in national all-cause, heart disease, and stroke mortality, examining spatiotemporal distributions of coronary heart disease (CHD) death rates and trends can provide data critical to improving the cardiovascular health of populations. This paper documents county-leve...

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Main Authors: Adam S Vaughan, Linda Schieb, Michele Casper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235839
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spelling doaj-38c731ba0eec4bd2b03bc7dde1ccbf272021-03-03T21:56:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01157e023583910.1371/journal.pone.0235839Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.Adam S VaughanLinda SchiebMichele CasperGiven recent slowing of declines in national all-cause, heart disease, and stroke mortality, examining spatiotemporal distributions of coronary heart disease (CHD) death rates and trends can provide data critical to improving the cardiovascular health of populations. This paper documents county-level CHD death rates and trends by age group, race, and gender from 1979 through 2017. Using data from the National Vital Statistics System and a Bayesian multivariate space-time conditional autoregressive model, we estimated county-level age-standardized annual CHD death rates for 1979 through 2017 by age group (35-64 years, 65 years and older), race (white, black, other), and gender (men, women). We then estimated county-level total percent change in CHD death rates during four intervals (1979-1990, 1990-2000, 2000-2010, 2010-2017) using log-linear regression models. For all intervals, national CHD death rates declined for all groups. Prior to 2010, although most counties across age, race, and gender experienced declines, pockets of increasing CHD death rates were observed in the Mississippi Delta, Oklahoma, East Texas, and New Mexico across age groups and gender, and were more prominent among non-white populations than whites. Since 2010, across age, race, and gender, county-level declines in CHD death rates have slowed, with a marked increase in the percent of counties with increasing CHD death rates (e.g. 4.4% and 19.9% for ages 35 and older during 1979-1990 and 2010-2017, respectively). Recent increases were especially prevalent and geographically widespread among ages 35-64 years, with 40.5% of counties (95% CI: 38.4, 43.1) experiencing increases. Spatiotemporal differences in these long term, county-level results can inform responses by the public health community, medical providers, researchers, and communities to address troubling recent trends.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235839
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam S Vaughan
Linda Schieb
Michele Casper
spellingShingle Adam S Vaughan
Linda Schieb
Michele Casper
Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Adam S Vaughan
Linda Schieb
Michele Casper
author_sort Adam S Vaughan
title Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.
title_short Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.
title_full Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.
title_fullStr Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.
title_full_unstemmed Historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, United States, 1979-2017.
title_sort historic and recent trends in county-level coronary heart disease death rates by race, gender, and age group, united states, 1979-2017.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Given recent slowing of declines in national all-cause, heart disease, and stroke mortality, examining spatiotemporal distributions of coronary heart disease (CHD) death rates and trends can provide data critical to improving the cardiovascular health of populations. This paper documents county-level CHD death rates and trends by age group, race, and gender from 1979 through 2017. Using data from the National Vital Statistics System and a Bayesian multivariate space-time conditional autoregressive model, we estimated county-level age-standardized annual CHD death rates for 1979 through 2017 by age group (35-64 years, 65 years and older), race (white, black, other), and gender (men, women). We then estimated county-level total percent change in CHD death rates during four intervals (1979-1990, 1990-2000, 2000-2010, 2010-2017) using log-linear regression models. For all intervals, national CHD death rates declined for all groups. Prior to 2010, although most counties across age, race, and gender experienced declines, pockets of increasing CHD death rates were observed in the Mississippi Delta, Oklahoma, East Texas, and New Mexico across age groups and gender, and were more prominent among non-white populations than whites. Since 2010, across age, race, and gender, county-level declines in CHD death rates have slowed, with a marked increase in the percent of counties with increasing CHD death rates (e.g. 4.4% and 19.9% for ages 35 and older during 1979-1990 and 2010-2017, respectively). Recent increases were especially prevalent and geographically widespread among ages 35-64 years, with 40.5% of counties (95% CI: 38.4, 43.1) experiencing increases. Spatiotemporal differences in these long term, county-level results can inform responses by the public health community, medical providers, researchers, and communities to address troubling recent trends.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235839
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