Literature DB >> 25585326

Community-wide cardiovascular disease prevention programs and health outcomes in a rural county, 1970-2010.

N Burgess Record1, Daniel K Onion2, Roderick E Prior1, David C Dixon1, Sandra S Record1, Fenwick L Fowler3, Gerald R Cayer1, Christopher I Amos4, Thomas A Pearson5.   

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Few comprehensive cardiovascular risk reduction programs, particularly those in rural, low-income communities, have sustained community-wide interventions for more than 10 years and demonstrated the effect of risk factor improvements on reductions in morbidity and mortality.
OBJECTIVE: To document health outcomes associated with an integrated, comprehensive cardiovascular risk reduction program in Franklin County, Maine, a low-income rural community. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Forty-year observational study involving residents of Franklin County, Maine, a rural, low-income population of 22,444 in 1970, that used the preceding decade as a baseline and compared Franklin County with other Maine counties and state averages.
INTERVENTIONS: Community-wide programs targeting hypertension, cholesterol, and smoking, as well as diet and physical activity, sponsored by multiple community organizations, including the local hospital and clinicians. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Resident participation; hypertension and hyperlipidemia detection, treatment, and control; smoking quit rates; hospitalization rates from 1994 through 2006, adjusted for median household income; and mortality rates from 1970 through 2010, adjusted for household income and age.
RESULTS: More than 150,000 individual county resident contacts occurred over 40 years. Over time, as cardiovascular risk factor programs were added, relevant health indicators improved. Hypertension control had an absolute increase of 24.7% (95% CI, 21.6%-27.7%) from 18.3% to 43.0%, from 1975 to 1978; later, elevated cholesterol control had an absolute increase of 28.5% (95% CI, 25.3%-31.6%) from 0.4% to 28.9%, from 1986 to 2010. Smoking quit rates improved from 48.5% to 69.5%, better than state averages (observed - expected [O - E], 11.3%; 95% CI, 5.5%-17.7%; P < .001), 1996-2000; these differences later disappeared when Maine's overall quit rate increased. Franklin County hospitalizations per capita were less than expected for the measured period, 1994-2006 (O - E, -17 discharges/1000 residents; 95% CI -20.1 to -13.9; P < .001). Franklin was the only Maine county with consistently lower adjusted mortality than predicted over the time periods 1970-1989 and 1990-2010 (O - E, -60.4 deaths/100,000; 95% CI, -97.9 to -22.8; P < .001, and -41.6/100,000; 95% CI, -77.3 to -5.8; P = .005, respectively). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Sustained, community-wide programs targeting cardiovascular risk factors and behavior changes to improve a Maine county's population health were associated with reductions in hospitalization and mortality rates over 40 years, compared with the rest of the state. Further studies are needed to assess the generalizability of such programs to other US county populations, especially rural ones, and to other parts of the world.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25585326      PMCID: PMC4573538          DOI: 10.1001/jama.2014.16969

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


  41 in total

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2.  Rural health care: a case study in Maine.

Authors:  D K Onion; C A Conant; D C Dixon; P A Judkins
Journal:  Med Group Manage       Date:  1980 Jul-Aug

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4.  Hypertension control in rural Maine. Franklin County high blood pressure program.

Authors:  F S Miller; N B Record
Journal:  J Maine Med Assoc       Date:  1976-09

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6.  High blood pressure control...the Maine thing.

Authors:  N B Record
Journal:  J Maine Med Assoc       Date:  1979-04

7.  The North Karelia project: an attempt at community prevention of cardiovascular disease.

Authors:  P Puska
Journal:  WHO Chron       Date:  1973-02

8.  Franklin County up to date.

Authors:  D C Dixon
Journal:  J Maine Med Assoc       Date:  1971-11

9.  Underlying causes of the emerging nonmetropolitan mortality penalty.

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Authors:  J W Farquhar; N Maccoby; P D Wood; J K Alexander; H Breitrose; B W Brown; W L Haskell; A L McAlister; A J Meyer; J D Nash; M P Stern
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1977-06-04       Impact factor: 79.321

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Review 10.  Prevention of stroke: a strategic global imperative.

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