Cardiovascular disease mortality rates have dropped significantly over the
past several decades, but a shift has occurred over time in the geographic
patterns of both coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke mortality This art
icle describes these patterns and discusses how they vary by sex, race, age
, and over time.
Death certificate information For Health Service Areas (HSAs) in 1988-1992
was used to analyze the geographic patterns of CHD and stroke death rates b
y race, sex, and age. Changes in these patterns from 1979-1993 also were ex
amined. In 1988-1992, considerable geographic variation in both CHD and str
oke mortality was demonstrated For each sex and race group. Coronary heart
disease rates were particularly high in the lower Mississippi valley and Ok
lahoma for all four groups, in the Ohio River valley and New York for white
s, and to a lesser extent for blacks. Areas of high rates among whites in t
he Carolinas resemble stroke mortality patterns. There were greater differe
nces by racial group than by gender, by the definition of heart disease. Ov
er time, rates have declined For both CHD and stroke, but regional differen
ces in the rates of change give the appearance of a southwesterly movement
of high heart disease rate clusters and a breakup of the "Stroke Belt."
Further research is needed to elucidate the cause of regional variation in
CHD and stroke mortality. Similar geographic patterns of high rates of CHD
and stroke in the southeastern United States may reflect common risk factor
s. This knowledge can be used to help develop appropriate interventions to
target these high-rate areas in the Mississippi and Ohio River valleys.