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Challenges That Face California

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Title: Challenges That Face California


1
Challenges That Face California
  • Liana Lianov MD, MPH
  • Nan Pheatt, MPH
  • April 24, 2003

2
Overview
  • Burden of disease
  • Nationwide challenges
  • Californias challenges
  • Suggestions for solutions

3
Total Burden from Heart DiseaseCalifornia
  • Number one cause of death (39 of deaths)
  • High death rate (187/100,000) relative to Healthy
    People 2010 target of 166/100,000
  • Major cause of disability and poor quality if
    life
  • High economic costs health care costs and loss
    of productivity (approximately one tenth of the
    nations cost of 229.9 billion for total heart
    disease and 129.9 for coronary heart disease)

4
Expected Rise in Total Burden
  • Despite decrease in mortality rates, total
    numbers of deaths from heart disease will rise
    due to
  • aging population
  • increase in prevalence of certain risk factors
  • diabetes increase by 61 1990 to 2000
  • obesity increase by 49 1990 to 2000
  • Increase in environmental triggers (such as poor
    air quality and stress-- possible triggers for
    heart attacks)

5
Burden Complicated by Psychosocial Factors
  • Depression and anxiety are under-diagnosed and
    under-treated.
  • Yet these conditions are associated with
    coronary heart disease mortality.
  • Depression is an independent risk factor for
    death in patients with risk factors for coronary
    heart disease.
  • Patients who are depressed post-heart attack have
    greater mortality.

6
Challenges Nationwide
  • Increase in certain risk factors
  • Aging population
  • Disparities of special populations
  • Public lack of knowledge and confusion
  • Delay in public seeking care
  • Changing science
  • Inadequate health care systems

7
Challenges NationwideContinued
  • Inadequate data and research
  • Human nature
  • Unhealthy environment
  • Lack of advocacy for heart disease control
  • Changing public health priorities
  • Limited resources

8
Worsening Risk Factor Profile
  • Significant rise in obesity and diabetes
  • Nearly one fifth of Americans are obese
  • 18.7 of Californians were obese in 2000 (up from
    7.4 in 1984)
  • Majority of states, including California, have
    greater than 6 diabetes prevalence

9
Aging of our Population
  • Number over 60 will increase by 112 in 2020
    compared to 1990 nationwide.
  • Hospitalizations and deaths due to heart disease
    increase with age.
  • Women are impacted, due to their longer average
    survival
  • hence even though rates of heart disease are
    lower in women, actual numbers equal men
  • 28,937 women vs. 29, 266 men had heart disease
    in 1998 in California.

10
Public Confusion
  • Lack of knowldege
  • Unaware coronary heart disease (CHD) is leading
    cause of death
  • Unaware of high risk of long-term disability
  • Belief that coronary bypass is a cure
  • Lack of recognition of symptoms and the need to
    call 911
  • Confusing messages in media
  • Diet, e.g. Atkins diet new nutrition pyramid
  • Hormone replacement

11
Delay in Care
  • Increasing out-of-hospital deaths
  • Explained in part by delay in seeking care
  • Lack of knowledge of signs and symptoms
  • Denial
  • Worry about out-of-pocket costs
  • Embarrassment
  • Lack of symptoms

12
Changing ScienceChallenge to Health Care
Providers
  • What are the risk factors?
  • Is C-Reactive Protein a risk factor or a marker?
  • When is hormone replacement appropriate?
  • What tests should be routine?
  • CT scan for coronary artery calcium?
  • What is a heart attack?
  • Is it inflammation versus blood clot ?(Plaques in
    vessel walls rupture and trigger clotting and
    inflammation.)

13
Inadequate Health Care Systems
  • Access
  • High numbers of uninsured
  • Quality
  • Few health care settings are fully implementing
    science into practice, such as well-established
    secondary prevention guidelines

14
Inadequate Health Care Systems
  • Inadequate health care resources, due to high
    numbers of patients with CHD
  • Increasing costs due to the need to treat risk
    factors earlier in order to prevent CHD
  • Blood pressure
  • Cholesterol
  • Blood glucose

15
Incomplete Data and Research
  • No prevalence data--Total number of persons at
    risk for heart disease are difficult to
    obtain--since many are asymptomatic and do not
    seek care
  • Limited data on special populations
  • Few clinical trials show effective interventions
    to promote health lifestyles, especially in
    special populations
  • Few research projects address how to translate
    the science into practice

16
Human Nature and Our Environment
  • Behavior change to address many of the risk
    factors is difficult to initiate and more
    difficult to maintain.
  • Our environment reinforces poor health habits
  • Fast food
  • Cul-de-sac neighborhoods
  • Lack of walking and biking paths

17
Other Challenges
  • Changing priorities of public policy and
    resources due to terrorism and war
  • The challenge of advocacy for heart disease
  • Constituency that advocates for resources towards
    heart disease has been less effective than the
    those who advocate for cancer and HIV/AIDS in
    part, this is due to populations having greater
    fear of cancer and HIV.

18
California Specific Challenges
  • Increasing risk profile
  • California dropped from 5th in 1990 to 21st in
    2001 in risk for heart disease based on high
    blood pressure, sedentary lifestyle and obesity
  • Diverse population/ethnic disparity/
  • many languages
  • Large geographic region/geographic disparity

19
California Specific ChallengesContinued
  • Poor health care quality indicators
  • Lack of central database of heart disease
    resources
  • Lack of state general funds and limited overall
    resources

20
Diversity Challenge
  • California African American women have higher
    rates (36) of high blood pressure than any other
    race/gender group
  • 4X as many hospital discharges from high blood
    pressure than white women
  • 31 of California African American women are
    obese
  • California Hispanics have the highest rates of
    diabetes at 10

21
Geographic Challenge
  • Disparities in heart disease in
  • Southern counties Los Angeles, Orange, San
    Bernardino, Riverside
  • Central Valley counties Kern, Stanislaus, San
    Joaquin, Sacramento, Sutter, Yuba

22
Poor Access and Quality of Care
  • 6.2 million Californians uninsured (for some
    period of time in the past year)
  • California ranks 44th in cardiovascular care
    quality indicators for MediCare beneficiaries

23
Lack of Central Database of Information
  • California has a large number of programs and
    services hence public health workers and health
    care providers need
  • Clearinghouse of information about who is doing
    what and where
  • Inventory of local experts and resources
  • Contact list of local referral sources for
    high-risk individuals and patients

24
Limited Resources in California
  • No state general funds for heart disease programs
  • No funds from Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention dedicated to heart disease
  • Funds for heart disease at state health
    department are general prevention funds shared
    with over 20 other programs and have been cut
    recently
  • Declining county funds and competing priorities

25
Two Levels of Solutions
  • Environmental change to promote
    heart-healthy lifestyles
  • Schools
  • Work sites
  • Communities
  • Health care organizations
  • Education and support for individual behavior
    change

26
Specific Solutions
  • Public programs at the state and local level
  • Programs for high-risk groups, such as African
    Americans
  • Information database on the Internet to serve as
    resource for health care workers

27
Specific SolutionsContinued
  • Systems changes in hospitals and clinics that
    support scientific guidelines
  • Research on effective ways to implement the
    science (translational research)
  • Wider use of family history tools to identify
    those at high genetic risk for CHD

28
Strategies to Implement Solutions
  • Legislation
  • Partnerships
  • Advocacy
  • State Plan to Control Heart Disease

29
Solutions--What You Can Do
  • Advocate for state programs that can educate the
    public, build collaborations with other groups,
    and make systems change
  • Advocate for heart-healthy neighborhood design
    and for walking/biking paths
  • Advocate for nutrition and physical activity in
    schools and worksites
  • Advocate for smoking cessation

30
SolutionsWhat You Can Do
  • Advocate for systems changes, such as the
    hospital systems changes promoted by the American
    Heart Associations Get With The Guidelines
    program
  • Promote calling 911 for signs and symptoms of
    heart attack

31
Thank You!
  • Llianov_at_dhs.ca.gov
  • Npheatt_at_dhs.ca.gov

32
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