Prevention and Control
Volume 2, Issue 2 , Pages 63-71, June 2006

Cardiovascular diseases mortality in Cuba, Mexico, Puerto Rico and US Hispanic populations

  • Ramón Durazo-Arvizu

      Affiliations

    • Department of Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 708 327 9007; fax: +1 708 327 9009.
  • ,
  • Simón Barquera

      Affiliations

    • Instituto Nacional de Salud, Cuernavaca, Mexico
  • ,
  • Manuel Franco

      Affiliations

    • Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health, Welch Center for Prevention and Epidemiology, Baltimore, MD
  • ,
  • Mariana Lazo

      Affiliations

    • Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health, Welch Center for Prevention and Epidemiology, Baltimore, MD
  • ,
  • Armando Seuc

      Affiliations

    • National Institute of Angiology and Vascular Surgery, La Habana, Cuba
  • ,
  • Pedro Orduñez

      Affiliations

    • Hospital Universitario “Dr. Gustavo Aldereguia Lima”, Cienfuegos, Cuba
  • ,
  • Alberto Palloni

      Affiliations

    • Center for Demography and Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
  • ,
  • Richard S. Cooper

      Affiliations

    • Department of Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, IL

Received 14 July 2006; received in revised form 2 October 2006; accepted 20 October 2006. published online 01 December 2006.

Summary 

Background

The large scale migration currently taking place from Latin-America to the United States has created a new era in public health. A systematic examination of patterns of cardiovascular mortality (CVD) for the major US Hispanic populations was carried out and a direct comparison to their respective countries/regions of origin was conducted to evaluate possible transitions in health with migration.

Methods

Vital statistics records from the US, Mexico, Cuba and Puerto Rico compiled by governmental agencies in each country during 2000 were used to estimate CVD age-adjusted mortality.

Results

Total age-adjusted CVD mortality for Mexican Americans, Cuban Americans and mainland Puerto Ricans was similar to non-Hispanic whites, and lower than among blacks. CVD rates in Mexico and on the island of Puerto Rico were likewise similar in magnitude, while these mortality rates were 20% higher in Cuba. Death from ischemic heart disease, on the other hand, was higher in non-Hispanic whites than Mexican Americans, Mexicans, Cuban Americans, but lower than Puerto Ricans, Cubans and US blacks. Stroke rates tended to be lower in US whites and all Hispanics and higher in Mexico and Cuba.

Conclusions

These data suggest at most a very modest Hispanic advantage in CVD within the US at the present time and a substantial burden of both heart disease and stroke in the countries from which these individuals have immigrated. Further surveillance efforts will be required to determine whether the long-term trends for these populations are following the downward course observed in the US.

Keywords: Cardiovascular disease, Hispanic health, Vital statistics, Country of origin, Mortality

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PII: S1573-2088(06)00097-3

doi:10.1016/j.precon.2006.10.004

Prevention and Control
Volume 2, Issue 2 , Pages 63-71, June 2006