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Case study that analyzes heart disease mortality rates of Americans between 2010-2019

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Case Study - US Heart Disease Mortality (2010-2019)

Author: Clint Barnard-El
Email: barnard.clint@yahoo.com
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/clintbarnardel/


Introduction

This repository provides the results from an analysis of heart disease mortality rates in the US during the period of 2010-2019. Because heart disease is the leading cause of mortality in the US, stakeholders such as healthcare providers and administrators could use analysis such as this to assess the impact of heart disease on healthcare systems, forecast future healthcare needs, and optimize resource allocation.

The data was provided by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) and exported from the National Vital Statistics System (NVSS).

Objective

Identify what specific groups were most/least impacted by heart disease (HD) mortality, the most prevalent types of HD, and regions within the US during 2010-2019.

Applications

  • RStudio
  • Google Chrome

Language

  • R

R Analysis

R Analysis (Markdown File)

Skills Demonstrated


Summary

The US national average of heart disease mortality rates was reduced by 13.69% (103 to 88.9 per 100K) during the period of 2010-2019. The mortality rate for both genders decreased (16.62% for women and 9.4% for men), however men had a higher mortality rate then women (111 per 100K compared to 85.5). All racial groups showed a reduction in mortality rates, however African-Americans (Black) had nearly double the mortality rates (123 per 100K) compared to Hispanic-Americans with the lowest mortality rates (66 per 100K). The four main types of heart disease specified were: Coronary Heart Disease, Stroke, Heart Attack, and Heart Failure. Despite Coronary Heart Disease rates dropping by 21%, it was still the most reported type (3x more than the other 3 types). All types decreased during this period except for heart attacks that increased by over 10% (23.5 to 26 per 100).

Potential Stakeholders:

  • Healthcare providers
  • Government health agencies
  • Insurance companies

Insights:

  • The southern region of the US was most impacted with Mississippi experiencing the highest rates (134.7 per 100K), followed by Arkansas, West Virginia, Oklahoma, and South Dakota (119.2-129.9 range).
  • States in the West and Northeast region were the least impacted with Massachusetts experiencing the lowest rates (68.1 per 100K), followed by Colorado, Minnesota, Washington, and Virginia (71.8-75.7 range).
  • The racial group most impacted were African-Americans; the least were Hispanic-Americans.
  • The gender most impacted were American males.

Notes:

  1. Dataset included data supplied by healthcare professionals/facilities.
  2. For fairer group comparison, “age-standardized” data was used.
  3. Racial group “other/unknown” included Asian, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaska Native, and/or unspecified. Not all states adopted the updated federal standards set in 1997 and 2003.
  4. Summation for heart disease types exclude generic/unspecified designations such as “Major Cardiovascular Disease” and “Diseases of the Heart”.

Dataset

The dataset was exported from the NVSS on 3/4/24 in the form of a .csv file.

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