Cardiovascular Mortality Gap Between the United States and Other High Life Expectancy Countries in 2000–2016

Author:

Acosta Enrique1ORCID,Mehta Neil2ORCID,Myrskylä Mikko13ORCID,Ebeling Marcus14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research , Rostock , Germany

2. Department of Preventive Medicine and Population Health, The University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston, Texas , USA

3. Center for Social Data Science, University of Helsinki , Helsinki, Finland

4. Unit of Epidemiology, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Reductions in U.S. cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality have stagnated. While other high life expectancy countries (HLCs) have also recently experienced a stall, the stagnation in CVD mortality in the United States appeared earlier and has been more pronounced. The reasons for the stall are unknown. We analyze cross-national variations in mortality trends to quantify the U.S. exceptionality and provide insight into its underlying causes. Methods Data are from the World Health Organization (2000–2016). We quantified differences in levels and trends of CVD mortality between the United States and 17 other HLCs. We decomposed differences to identify the individual contributions of major CVD subclassifications (ischemic heart disease [IHD], stroke, other heart diseases). To identify potential behavioral explanations, we compared trends in CVD mortality with trends in other causes of death related to obesity, smoking, alcohol, and drugs. Results Our study has four central findings: (a) U.S. CVD mortality is consistently higher than the average of other HLCs; (b) the U.S.–HLC gap declined until around 2008 and increased thereafter; (c) the shift from convergence to divergence was mainly driven by slowing IHD and stroke mortality reductions and increasing mortality from other CVD causes; (d) among the potential risk factors, only obesity- and alcohol-related mortality showed age-specific temporal changes that are similar to those observed for cardiovascular mortality. Discussion The exceptional changes in U.S. CVD mortality are driven by a distinct pattern of slowing reductions in IHD and stroke mortality and deteriorating mortality from other CVD causes. Obesity and alcohol abuse appear to be interrelated factors.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference48 articles.

1. The boomer penalty: Excess mortality among baby boomers in Canada and the United States;Acosta;MPIDR Working Papers and Preprints,2020

2. Reproducible materials for “Cardiovascular mortality gap between the United States and other high life expectancy countries during the period 2000–2016.”;Acosta;Open Science Framework Project (OSF),2021

3. The decrease in life expectancy in the United States since 2014;Barbieri;Population and Societies,2019

4. Association between clinically recorded alcohol consumption and initial presentation of 12 cardiovascular diseases: Population based cohort study using linked health records;Bell;BMJ,2017

5. Mortality and morbidity in the 21st century;Case;Brookings Papers on Economic Activity,,2017

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