From the Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Universidad
del País Vasco (F.R.A.); Department of Preventive Medicine and Public
Health, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (F.R.A., P.G.-C., J.R.B.B., B. d
A.M., J. d R.C.); and Centro Universitario de Salud Pública,
Consejería de Sanidad y Servicios Sociales-Universidad Autónoma
de Madrid (P.G.-C., B.A.M.) (Spain).
Correspondence to Dr Fernando Rodríguez Artalejo, Departamento de Medicina Preventiva y Salud Pública, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Avda Arzobispo Morcillo s/n, 28029 Madrid, Spain. E-mail osproarf{at}vc.ehu.es
Background and PurposeThis study
examines the changes in provincial distribution of cerebrovascular
disease (CVD) mortality and its socioeconomic and lifestyle risk
factors to identify those factors that have most greatly contributed to
the decline in CVD mortality in Spain during the period
19751993.
MethodsWe performed a study using data aggregated at a
provincial level. Mortality data were taken from official vital
statistics, while data on risk factors were obtained from surveys of
representative large Spanish population samples.
Correlation and multiple linear regression analyses were
performed on percent changes in age-standardized CVD mortality from
19751979 to 19891993 and its potential determinants during the
period 19641980.
ResultsCVD mortality was higher in the southern and eastern
(Mediterranean coast) provinces in 19751979 and again in 19891993.
Between these periods there was a 55% decline in CVD mortality, which
affected all provinces but was greater in those with a lower CVD
mortality (r=-0.31, P=0.03). The
19641980 period witnessed an increase in the intake of most
foodstuffs and all types of fats. However, there was a decrease in the
consumption of vegetables and legumes and in the proportion of
illiteracy among the population older than 45 years. The greatest
increase in fruit and fish consumption and the greatest decrease in
illiteracy were registered by Spain's northernmost provinces, the same
provinces that recorded the greatest decline in CVD mortality.
Changes in fruit, wine, and fish intake accounted for 22% of the
variation in the decline in CVD mortality. The increase in fruit
consumption and decrease in wine consumption showed a statistically
significant relationship (P
ConclusionsThe increase in fruit and decrease in wine
consumption from 19641980 may have contributed to the decline in CVD
mortality in Spain during 19751993.
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions
Consumption of Fruit and Wine and the Decline in Cerebrovascular Disease Mortality in Spain (19751993)
0.04) with the decline in
CVD mortality.
Key Words: geography mortality Spain stroke trends
This article has been cited by other articles:
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