Improvements in risk factors and changes in cardiac treatments have both contributed to reductions in coronary heart disease mortality, with models suggesting further reductions are feasible.
Coronary heart disease (CHD)
Prevention (improvements in risk factors) and clinical treatments
CHD mortality
Mortality rates from coronary heart disease (CHD), which had risen during the twentieth century in many countries, started declining in some countries during the 1960s. Once initial skepticism about the validity of the observed trends dissipated, researchers attempted to generate explanations about the events that had transpired using a variety of techniques, including ecological examinations of the trends in risk factors for CHD and changes in management of CHD, multivariate risk equations, and increasingly sophisticated modeling techniques. Improvements in risk factors as well as changes in cardiac treatments have both contributed to the reductions in CHD mortality, although estimates of their contributions have varied among countries. Models suggest that additional large reductions in CHD mortality are feasible by either improving the distribution of risk factors in the population or raising the percentage of patients receiving evidence-based treatments.
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Earl S. Ford
Northwestern University
Simon Capewell
University of Liverpool
Annual Review of Public Health
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
University of Liverpool
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
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Ford et al. (Thu,) conducted a review in Coronary heart disease (CHD). Prevention (improvements in risk factors) and clinical treatments was evaluated on CHD mortality. Improvements in risk factors and changes in cardiac treatments have both contributed to reductions in coronary heart disease mortality, with models suggesting further reductions are feasible.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0c6fe7a36b1d7944e895bc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-031210-101211
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