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Coronary heart disease rates are down, but South still a hot spot

By The Wall Street Journal  
   October 17, 2011

Fewer people in the U.S. report having angina or a heart attack, though the South continues to be a hot spot for heart troubles. So says the CDC in its latest Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The percentage of adults surveyed who report being told by a health professional that they have coronary heart disease — which happens when the blood vessels to the heart narrow, causing chest pain or heart attack — fell to 6% last year from 6.7% in 2006. There's been a concerted public-health effort over the past two decades to better prevent and treat heart disease. Fewer people are smoking, and hypertension and high cholesterol are better controlled. As the WSJ's Ron Winslow has reported, the payoff has included a sharp drop in the heart-attack rate among older Americans. But cardiovascular disease is still the leading cause of death in the U.S. — according to the CDC, it kills more people than cancer, lower respiratory diseases and accidents combined. And according to the new stats, prevalence of CHD varies by age, gender and ethnicity.

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