Once again, statistics on the cardiovascular health of the United States portray a complicated picture of improvement and decline. On the one hand, deaths from cardiovascular disease continue to decline. On the other hand, ominous trends, many stemming from the increase in obesity, suggest that the good news may not last much longer. The full picture is contained in the American Heart Associations Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics– 2012 Update, published in Circulation.
Here are a few key items from the update:
- The 2008 overall rate of death attributable to CV disease: 244.8 per 100 000.
- CV disease accounted for one-third (32.8%) of all deaths.
- Deaths from CV disease declined by 30.6% from 1998 to 2008.
- One-third of deaths from CV causes occur before the age of 75 years of age.
- One in 9 death certificates mentions heart failure.
- One-third (33.5%) of US adults have hypertension.
- 21.2% of adult men and 17.5% of adult women smoke cigarettes.
- 15% of US adults have total serum cholesterol levels over 240 mg/dL.
- 8% of the adult population has diagnosed diabetes while more than a third of the population (36.8%) had abnormal fasting glucose levels.
- Two-third of US adults (67.3%) are overweight or obese.
- One-third of children (31.7%) are overweight or obese.
Here is the AHA press release:
New stats show America’s heart health needs improvement
- New statistics show America’s cardiovascular health is far from “ideal.”
- For example, between 1971 and 2004, the average total daily calorie consumption has increased by 22 percent in women and by 10 percent in men.
- There is good news – the stroke death rate fell 34.8 percent between 1998 and 2008, dropping it from the third to fourth leading cause of death, possibly because of better treatments for acute stroke. However, reclassifying some respiratory diseases into one category also played a role.
- Cardiovascular diseases accounted for one in every three deaths in the United States in 2008; more than 2,200 Americans die of cardiovascular diseases every day ― an average of one death every 39 seconds.
- The cost of cardiovascular care and treatment increased over $11 billion from 2007 to 2008.
- The direct and indirect cost of CVD and stroke in the United State for 2008 was an estimated $297.7 billion.
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