Background: This study aims to characterize the role of county-specific legacy of slavery in patterning temporal (i.e., 1968–2014), and geographic (i.e., Southern counties) declines in heart disease mortality. In this context, the U.S. has witnessed dramatic declines in heart disease mortality since the 1960s, which have benefitted place and race groups unevenly, with slower declines in the South, especially for the Black population. Methods: Age-adjusted race- and county-specific mortality rates from 1968–2014 for all diseases of the heart were calculated for all Southern U.S. counties. Candidate confounding and mediating covariates from 1860, 1930, and 1970, were combined with mortality data in multivariable regression models to estimate ...
<div><p>Heart disease (HD) remains the leading cause of death among Mississippians; however, despite...
This paper uses the records of the Union Army to compare the older age mortality experience of the f...
Problem/Condition: Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. In 2015, heart ...
Background: Examining small‐area differences in the strength of declining heart disease mortality by...
STUDY OBJECTIVE: Despite significant declines since the late 1960s, coronary mortality remains the l...
Research on the long-term impacts of chattel slavery in the United States has yielded some important...
Advances in medicine and surgery over the last 100 years have resulted in improved treatments for al...
In this project, we analyzed the geographical distribution of heart disease mortality rates by count...
This research examines differences in white and black persistence of mortality in the United States ...
Objectives: This study examined trends in geographical disparities in cardiovascular-disease (CVD)...
In this dissertation I present the first county-level estimates of deaths in the Confederate Army fo...
Objective: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) rates differ markedly by minority status, with younger Black...
Despite Civil Rights legislation, racial inequality persists, especially in the context of poverty. ...
Objective: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) rates differ markedly by minority status, with younger Black...
Objectives: This study examined trends and socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovas...
<div><p>Heart disease (HD) remains the leading cause of death among Mississippians; however, despite...
This paper uses the records of the Union Army to compare the older age mortality experience of the f...
Problem/Condition: Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. In 2015, heart ...
Background: Examining small‐area differences in the strength of declining heart disease mortality by...
STUDY OBJECTIVE: Despite significant declines since the late 1960s, coronary mortality remains the l...
Research on the long-term impacts of chattel slavery in the United States has yielded some important...
Advances in medicine and surgery over the last 100 years have resulted in improved treatments for al...
In this project, we analyzed the geographical distribution of heart disease mortality rates by count...
This research examines differences in white and black persistence of mortality in the United States ...
Objectives: This study examined trends in geographical disparities in cardiovascular-disease (CVD)...
In this dissertation I present the first county-level estimates of deaths in the Confederate Army fo...
Objective: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) rates differ markedly by minority status, with younger Black...
Despite Civil Rights legislation, racial inequality persists, especially in the context of poverty. ...
Objective: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) rates differ markedly by minority status, with younger Black...
Objectives: This study examined trends and socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovas...
<div><p>Heart disease (HD) remains the leading cause of death among Mississippians; however, despite...
This paper uses the records of the Union Army to compare the older age mortality experience of the f...
Problem/Condition: Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. In 2015, heart ...