The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Black Americans at highest risk of heart disease, as overall numbers fall

- By Lisa Backus CONN. HEALTH ITEAM WRITER

The death rate from heart disease plummeted nationally over several decades for all racial and ethnic groups, but the rate of decline has slowed slightly and African Americans and lowincome individual­s are still at a higher risk of developing the disease and dying from it, according to a report from the National Center of Health Statistics.

The report isn’t surprising to Dr. Edward Schuster, medical director, Stamford Health Cardiac Rehabilita­tion Program. “In the United States, there’s a lot of talk about income disparity, which is a political hotcake,” Schuster said. “But what we are seeing is a life expectancy disparity. According to a recent Journal of American Medical Associatio­n, if you’re a man in the top 1 percent of income, you can expect to live 13

years longer than someone in the 1 percent at the bottom.”

Heart disease is largely preventabl­e by maintainin­g a balanced diet, a healthy weight and moderate exercise, with only 20 percent of cases involving genetics, said Dr. David Katz, who heads the YaleGriffi­n Prevention Research Center, which works with communitie­s to develop programs to control chronic diseases.

But significan­t groups in lower income and urban areas don’t — or can’t — act on the message, Katz said.

“Your zip code is a better predicator of your health than your genetic code,” Katz said. “It all depends on what your neighborho­od is like. Do you have access to fruit and vegetables? Do you fear walking your streets? Where you live is massively more important than your genetics.”

Schuster agreed, and said heart disease clearly is a zip code issue with more — and younger — adults facing higher rates of high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity in lowerincom­e communitie­s.

“In the poorer zip codes, within a block of each school, kids can walk to get junk food,” Schuster said. “It really is a cultural crisis and I’m not sure it can be fixed.”

Nationally the death rate for nonHispani­c blacks has dropped from 337.4 per 100,000 U.S. residents in 1999 to 208 per 100,000 in 2017, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. But nonHispani­c blacks are still twice as likely to die of heart disease than whites, Hispanics, Pacific Islanders or Asians, the report said.

Connecticu­t is following the national trend, according to figures provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . In 2005, 7,650 Connecticu­t residents died of heart disease, translatin­g into a death rate of 180.7 per 100,000. In 2014, 7,018 Connecticu­t residents died of heart disease, a death rate of 145.6 per 100,000.

The heart disease death rate in Connecticu­t has remained fairly steady since 2015, with the annual number of deaths hovering between 7,000 and 7,200. Nationally the death rate from heart disease dropped from 216.8 deaths per 100,000 U.S. residents in 2005 to 165 deaths per 100,000 U.S. residents in 2017.

Despite the decreases, African Americans and lowincome individual­s in Connecticu­t remain at a higher risk for obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes, all chronic illnesses connected to heart disease, according to the 2017 Connecticu­t Cardiovasc­ular Disease Statistics Report by the state Department of Public Health (DPH).

DPH received a $4.3 million grant to fund programs for lowincome urban residents aimed at identifyin­g and reducing chronic health problems linked to heart disease, said Elizabeth Conklin, spokeswoma­n for the agency. About 70 percent of the grant is spent on programmin­g, the remainder pays DPH personnel.

But it’s a struggle to reach lowincome families who are wrestling with issues such as housing and transporta­tion while inexpensiv­e highfat and highsodium foods are easily available.

“Diet and exercise are the least of your priorities if you spend two hours every day on the bus to get to work,” said Lisa McCooey, the DPH’s cancer program director and acting director of chronic disease.

It is unclear if the numbers are actually showing that the death rate from heart disease has stalled, according to Dr. Harlan Krumholz, a Yale University cardiologi­st and researcher, since it’s impossible to tell whether or not cardiac arrests from the opioid epidemic are being included in heart disease death statistics, he said.

But it is evident that people in lower income brackets don’t have the same resources to take walks in safe neighborho­ods, a quality array of fruits and vegetables close by and access to good health care, which includes regular blood pressure screenings, Krumholz said.

“It is economic,” Krumholz said. “Many people live in a food desert where food is cheap but not nutritiona­l. There are no opportunit­ies to exercise and no access to health care.”

Advances in medicine and technology drove the sizable decreases in deaths over the past two decades, according to Katz. Now it will likely be up to lifestyle changes to drive any further decreases, he said.

The YaleGriffi­n prevention center is testing out a program that encourages doctors to issue prescripti­ons for fruits and vegetables that can be purchased for a low cost at farmer’s markets. The patient’s employer pays a portion of the tab, “because it’s cheaper than a bypass,” Katz said.

 ?? Carl Jordan Castro / Conn. Health I-Team ?? Dr. Edward Schuster, of Stamford, said heart disease clearly is a zip code issue with more — and younger — adults facing higher rates of high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity in lowerincom­e communitie­s.
Carl Jordan Castro / Conn. Health I-Team Dr. Edward Schuster, of Stamford, said heart disease clearly is a zip code issue with more — and younger — adults facing higher rates of high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity in lowerincom­e communitie­s.

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