Stroke, Vol 19, 1507-1513, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
S Wing, M Casper, WB Davis, A Pellom, W Riggan and HA Tyroler
We mapped average age-adjusted stroke mortality rates for white men and
white women aged 35-74 years for state economic areas (counties or groups
of counties) in the continental United States for three 7-year periods
between 1962 and 1982. Despite the decline of national stroke mortality
rates, rates in some areas failed to decline between 1962- 1968 and
1969-1975. All areas experienced declines in 1976-1982, by which time some
rates in the highest decile of the rate distribution were comparable to
rates that had been in the lowest decile in 1962- 1968. An east-west
gradient of high-to-low stroke mortality rates was evident for both white
men and white women in all three periods. Within the eastern part of the
United States, high rates appeared more commonly in the South, and more so
for white men than for white women. The "stroke belt" (area of very high
stroke mortality rates in the coastal plain of the South) became less
concentrated over the 2 decades, while a clustering of state economic areas
with high rates along the Mississippi River and in the Ohio River valley
became more pronounced.
ARTICLES
Stroke mortality maps. United States whites aged 35-74 years, 1962-1982
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7400.
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