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Risk Factors for Cardiovascular Disease
Fast Facts
Cardiovascular Disease Among African Americans
Women with Heart Disease
Causal Factors of Coronary Heart Disease
Difference in Care for Minorities
Cost of Heart Disease
References
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Hypertension is a highly prevalent, life-threatening chronic condition.
When uncontrolled, it is a risk factor for Coronary Heart Disease and
stroke. Hypertension in the United States is now estimated to affect 60
million persons.(1) The prevalence increases with age and is twice as high
among African Americans as among whites.(1) An African American hypertensive is
2-3 times more likely than a white person with hypertension to have a
stroke.(1)
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Hypertension is the chief factor in stroke, the cause of 150,000 deaths in the United States each year, and a major risk factor for the 1 million heart attacks that occur in the country annually, 500,000 of which result in death. Hypertension also contributes substantially to kidney disease.(3) An African American is 17 times more likely to progress to end-stage renal disease.
(1) Back to Top
Cardiovascular Disease in African Americans
African American males are disproportionately affected by hypertension; of the
approximately 62 million Americans who have hypertension or who are being
treated for hypertension by a physician, 38% are African American.
(4) Before the 1970s, heart disease
was widely believed to be uncommon in African Americans. It is now
recognized that heart disease mortality rates for African Americans exceed those
of whites age 25 to 64 and are similar to the rates of whites for all ages
combined. (5) Cardiovascular disease accounts for 26.6% of the
identifiable excess mortality among African American males in comparison with
white males.(4) One reason for the excess mortality is poor access to care.
(4) |
Women with Heart Disease
Heart disease is the leading
cause of death in women in the United States.(1)
Overwhelming
evidence supports the view that African American women, especially those
residing in the South, experience higher heart disease death rates
than women of
other ethnic, racial, and geographic origins.
Approximately 40 women per
100,000 across the United States die from
heart disease each year, and more than
6.5 million American women alive
today have suffered a myocardial infarction (heart attack) or
angina pectoralis(chest pain or discomfort).(6)
As a woman ages, the risk of myocardial infarction
increases, as does
the likelihood of death and disability from a myocardial
infarction.
(6) The burden of heart disease is highest among African American
women followed by Caucasian, Hispanic, American Indian and Alaskan
Native, and
Asian and Pacific Islander women, in that order.
(6) |
Quote
Byrd wrote in 1991, “Rising racial
differentials...in infant mortality,
maternal
mortality, cancer survival, cardiovascular mortality,
childhood immunization
rates, hospitalizations, and length of stay all
indicate that African Americans
are not receiving adequate high-quality
basic health services.” (7)
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Possible Causal Factors of Coronary Heart Disease
BMI=Body Mass Index
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Obesity is an independent
predictor of Coronary Heart Disease (CHD), which is the major cause of death and
disability in older persons.(8) It is also the major source of health care
expense in men and women over the age of 65.(9)
The National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES) indicated that African Americans have a lower intake
of calcium than whites. High nutritional intake of calcium is a possible
protective factor for hypertension.(2) For more information, go to Nutrition.
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Minorities receive different cardiac care from non-minorities...
A review of racial and ethnic differences in
cardiac care from 1984-2001 compiled by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation in
October 2002 found that of the 81 studies investigated, 68 find racial and
ethnic differences in cardiac care for at least one minority group. Of the
68, 46 find differences in cardiac care for all of the procedures and treatments
investigated, and 22 find differences in cardiac care for some procedures and
treatments and not others. The 13 remaining studies include 11 that find
no racial or ethnic differences in cardiac care, and two that find the racial
and ethnic minority groups more likely than whites to receive appropriate care.
(10) For more information on what those differences are, check out the article or do a PubMed search.
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Cost
In 2003, the cost of heart disease and
stroke is projected to
be
$351 billion: $209 billion for
health care expenditures and $142 billion for
lost productivity from
death and disability.
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Back to Top
References 1. Piane G. A comparison of the effect of a hypertension education program among
black and white participants. J Health Care Poor Underserved
1990;1(2):243-53.
2. Amercian Heart Association (AHA). Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics-2004
Update. Dallas, Texas: AHA, 2004. http://www.americanheart.org
3. Buchowski MS, Sun M. Nutrition in minority elders: current problems and future
directions. J Health Care Poor Underserved 1996;7(3):184-209.
4. Thomas DJ, Thomas J. Black male physicians at risk. J Health Care Poor
Underserved 1993;4(1):1-5.
5. Lewis CE, Raczynski JM, Oberman A, Cutter GR. Risk factors and the natural
history of coronary heart disease in blacks. Cardiovasc Clin 1991;21(3):29-45.
6. Andrews JO, Graham-Garcia J, Raines TL. Heart disease mortality in women:
racial, ethnic, and geographic disparities. J Cardiovasc Nurs 2001;15(3):83-7.
7. Byrd WM, Clayton LA. The 'slave health deficit'. Racism and health outcomes.
Health PAC Bull 1991;21(2):25-8.
8. Harris T, Cook EF, Kannel WB, Goldman L. Proportional hazards analysis of risk
factors for coronary heart disease in individuals aged 65 or older. The
Framingham Heart Study. J Am Geriatr Soc 1988;36(11):1023-8.
9. Neill WA, Branch LG, De Jong G, et al. Cardiac disability. The impact of
coronary heart disease on patients' daily activities. Arch Intern Med
1985;145(9):1642-7.
10. Lillie-Blanton M, Rushing OE, Ruiz S, Mayberry R, and L Boone. Racial/Ethnic
differences in cardiac care: The weight of the evidence. Henry J. Kaiser Family
Foundation. October 2002.
11. National Center for Chronic Disease Control and Prevention. Preventing Heart Disease and Stroke. Atlanta, GA: CDC, 2005. http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/bb_heartdisease/
This research was supported by a National Library of Medicine (NLM)
Publication Grant #5G08 LM07653-02 in support of the creation of a web site
titled Factline: Tracking Health in Underserved Communities, www.factline.org.
Saqi S. Maleque, MSPH, Researcher, Principal Investigator: Virginia Brennan,
PhD.
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