FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: HHS Press Office
Thursday, Aug. 5, 2004 (202) 690-6343
HHS ANNOUNCES INITIATIVE TO REDUCE THE INCIDENCE OF STROKE
IN STROKE BELT STATES
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today announced approximately
$2 million in grant awards to support a new initiative aimed at
reducing the excessively high rates of stroke, stroke disabilities
and stroke deaths that disproportionately occur in the southeastern
region of the United States.
The Secretary's Stroke Belt Elimination Initiative (SBEI) awards
approximately $8 million over four years within the seven states
experiencing the highest stroke death rates. The three grant recipients
are: Forsyth Medical Center Foundation, Winston-Salem, N.C; Medical
University of South Carolina, Charleston, S.C.; and the University
of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Ala. These institutions
along with local community-based organizations will implement
and coordinate prevention and awareness programs locally and across
the region targeting stroke and hypertension.
"The southeastern region of the country has suffered from
the burden of stroke for far too long," Secretary Thompson
said. "Through our Stroke Belt Elimination Initiative we
will increase hypertension prevention and control activities to
eliminate untimely deaths and disability."
While HHS will continue its current high-level efforts to reduce
stroke across the U.S., the SBEI is designed to reduce the overall
stroke burden among the population that lives in the seven "Stroke
Belt" states -- Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
The SBEI represents a collaborative effort among HHS agencies
and is part of the Closing the Health Gap Initiative, which seeks
to reduce racial and ethnic disparities in health care. The SBEI
consists of four core interventions including development and
implementation of a community-wide awareness and education campaign,
a communications network that informs individuals of the availability
of free blood pressure screening activities, a component for health
professionals that emphasizes improvement of blood pressure control
rates for persons with hypertension, and a component for health
systems and health plans that emphasizes improvement of blood
pressure control rates for persons with hypertension.
"This SBEI is truly a community focused initiative and an
important part of our effort to end health disparities,"
said HHS Deputy Secretary Claude A. Allen. "Through collaboration
SBEI will establish activities that identify local partners and
coalitions so that we can together eliminate this deadly killer."
As of 2001, the average stroke death rate for the seven core stroke
belt states was significantly higher than the U.S. national average
or that of the 43 remaining states and the District of Columbia
(about 22 percent and 26 percent higher respectively). The specific
cause of excess stroke deaths in the Stroke Belt continues to
be unknown.
The overall burden of stroke in the U.S. continues to be substantial.
Stroke is the third leading cause of death and a leading cause
of long-term disability among U.S. adults. On average, someone
living in the U.S. has a stroke about every 45 seconds. There
are over 700,000 new strokes annually and about 29 percent of
these are recurrent strokes. Over 4.8 million adults had a history
of stroke in 2001. Stroke events are estimated to generate over
$53.6 billion in direct and indirect costs in 2004.
High blood pressure and hypertension are the leading risk factor
for stroke. Over 70 percent of persons with a stroke also suffer
from hypertension. Critical risk factors also include diabetes,
excess weight or salt intake, physical inactivity and smoking.
Additional information on the Stroke Belt Elimination Initiative
is available at http://www.omhrc.gov/omh/whatsnew/2pgwhatsnew/funding716faq.htm.
Last Updated 08/30/05