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autor George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
beschreibung Cardiovascular disparities remain pervasive in the United States. Unequal disease burden is evident among population groups based on sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational attainment, nativity, or geography. Despite the significant declines in cardiovascular disease mortality rates in all demographic groups during the last 50 years, large disparities remain by sex, race, ethnicity, and geography. Recent data from modeling studies, linked micromap plots, and small-area analyses also demonstrate prominent variation in cardiovascular disease mortality rates across states and counties, with an especially high disease burden in the southeastern United States and Appalachia. Despite these continued disparities, few large-scale intervention studies have been conducted in these high-burden populations to examine the feasibility of reducing or eliminating cardiovascular disparities. To address this challenge, on June 22 and 23, 2017, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute convened experts from a broad range of biomedical, behavioral, environmental, implementation, and social science backgrounds to summarize the current state of knowledge of cardiovascular disease disparities and propose intervention strategies aligned with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute mission. This report presents the themes, challenges, opportunities, available resources, and recommended actions discussed at the workshop.
citation_standardnr 6141708
datenlieferant ipn_articles
feed_id 321
feed_publisher American Heart Association (AHA)
feed_publisher_url http://www.americanheart.org/
insertion_date 2018-01-19
journaleissn 1524-4571
journalissn 0009-7330
publikationsjahr_anzeige 2018
publikationsjahr_facette 2018
publikationsjahr_intervall 7984:2015-2019
publikationsjahr_sort 2018
publisher American Heart Association (AHA)
quelle Circulation Research
relation http://circres.ahajournals.org/content/122/2/213.short?rss=1
schlagwort Cardiovascular Disease, Race and Ethnicity, Risk Factors, Health Services, Cerebrovascular Disease/Stroke
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
shingle_author_2 George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
shingle_author_3 George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
shingle_author_4 George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
shingle_catch_all_1 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
Cardiovascular Disease, Race and Ethnicity, Risk Factors, Health Services, Cerebrovascular Disease/Stroke
Cardiovascular disparities remain pervasive in the United States. Unequal disease burden is evident among population groups based on sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational attainment, nativity, or geography. Despite the significant declines in cardiovascular disease mortality rates in all demographic groups during the last 50 years, large disparities remain by sex, race, ethnicity, and geography. Recent data from modeling studies, linked micromap plots, and small-area analyses also demonstrate prominent variation in cardiovascular disease mortality rates across states and counties, with an especially high disease burden in the southeastern United States and Appalachia. Despite these continued disparities, few large-scale intervention studies have been conducted in these high-burden populations to examine the feasibility of reducing or eliminating cardiovascular disparities. To address this challenge, on June 22 and 23, 2017, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute convened experts from a broad range of biomedical, behavioral, environmental, implementation, and social science backgrounds to summarize the current state of knowledge of cardiovascular disease disparities and propose intervention strategies aligned with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute mission. This report presents the themes, challenges, opportunities, available resources, and recommended actions discussed at the workshop.
George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
American Heart Association (AHA)
0009-7330
00097330
1524-4571
15244571
shingle_catch_all_2 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
Cardiovascular Disease, Race and Ethnicity, Risk Factors, Health Services, Cerebrovascular Disease/Stroke
Cardiovascular disparities remain pervasive in the United States. Unequal disease burden is evident among population groups based on sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational attainment, nativity, or geography. Despite the significant declines in cardiovascular disease mortality rates in all demographic groups during the last 50 years, large disparities remain by sex, race, ethnicity, and geography. Recent data from modeling studies, linked micromap plots, and small-area analyses also demonstrate prominent variation in cardiovascular disease mortality rates across states and counties, with an especially high disease burden in the southeastern United States and Appalachia. Despite these continued disparities, few large-scale intervention studies have been conducted in these high-burden populations to examine the feasibility of reducing or eliminating cardiovascular disparities. To address this challenge, on June 22 and 23, 2017, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute convened experts from a broad range of biomedical, behavioral, environmental, implementation, and social science backgrounds to summarize the current state of knowledge of cardiovascular disease disparities and propose intervention strategies aligned with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute mission. This report presents the themes, challenges, opportunities, available resources, and recommended actions discussed at the workshop.
George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
American Heart Association (AHA)
0009-7330
00097330
1524-4571
15244571
shingle_catch_all_3 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
Cardiovascular Disease, Race and Ethnicity, Risk Factors, Health Services, Cerebrovascular Disease/Stroke
Cardiovascular disparities remain pervasive in the United States. Unequal disease burden is evident among population groups based on sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational attainment, nativity, or geography. Despite the significant declines in cardiovascular disease mortality rates in all demographic groups during the last 50 years, large disparities remain by sex, race, ethnicity, and geography. Recent data from modeling studies, linked micromap plots, and small-area analyses also demonstrate prominent variation in cardiovascular disease mortality rates across states and counties, with an especially high disease burden in the southeastern United States and Appalachia. Despite these continued disparities, few large-scale intervention studies have been conducted in these high-burden populations to examine the feasibility of reducing or eliminating cardiovascular disparities. To address this challenge, on June 22 and 23, 2017, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute convened experts from a broad range of biomedical, behavioral, environmental, implementation, and social science backgrounds to summarize the current state of knowledge of cardiovascular disease disparities and propose intervention strategies aligned with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute mission. This report presents the themes, challenges, opportunities, available resources, and recommended actions discussed at the workshop.
George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
American Heart Association (AHA)
0009-7330
00097330
1524-4571
15244571
shingle_catch_all_4 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
Cardiovascular Disease, Race and Ethnicity, Risk Factors, Health Services, Cerebrovascular Disease/Stroke
Cardiovascular disparities remain pervasive in the United States. Unequal disease burden is evident among population groups based on sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational attainment, nativity, or geography. Despite the significant declines in cardiovascular disease mortality rates in all demographic groups during the last 50 years, large disparities remain by sex, race, ethnicity, and geography. Recent data from modeling studies, linked micromap plots, and small-area analyses also demonstrate prominent variation in cardiovascular disease mortality rates across states and counties, with an especially high disease burden in the southeastern United States and Appalachia. Despite these continued disparities, few large-scale intervention studies have been conducted in these high-burden populations to examine the feasibility of reducing or eliminating cardiovascular disparities. To address this challenge, on June 22 and 23, 2017, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute convened experts from a broad range of biomedical, behavioral, environmental, implementation, and social science backgrounds to summarize the current state of knowledge of cardiovascular disease disparities and propose intervention strategies aligned with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute mission. This report presents the themes, challenges, opportunities, available resources, and recommended actions discussed at the workshop.
George A. Mensah, Richard S. Cooper, Anna Maria Siega–Riz, Lisa A. Cooper, Justin D. Smith, C. Hendricks Brown, John M. Westfall, Elizabeth O. Ofili, Le; Shawndra N. Price, Sonia Arteaga, Melissa C. Green Parker, Cheryl R. Nelson, Bradley J. Newsome, Nicole Redmond, Rebecca A. Roper, Bettina M. Beech, Jada L. Brooks, Debra Furr–Holden, Samson Y. Gebreab, Wayne H. Giles, Regina Smith James, Tene T. Lewis, Ali H. Mokdad, Kari D. Moore, Joseph E. Ravenell, Al Richmond, Nancy E. Schoenberg, Mario Sims, Gopal K. Singh, Anne E. Sumner, Roberto P. Trevino, Karriem S. Watson, M. Larissa Aviles–Santa, Jared P. Reis, Charlotte A. Pratt, Michael M. Engelgau, David C. Goff, Jr, Eliseo J. Perez–Stable
American Heart Association (AHA)
0009-7330
00097330
1524-4571
15244571
shingle_title_1 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
shingle_title_2 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
shingle_title_3 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
shingle_title_4 Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
timestamp 2025-06-30T23:32:07.506Z
titel Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
titel_suche Reducing Cardiovascular Disparities Through Community-Engaged Implementation Research [Special Articles]
topic WW-YZ
uid ipn_articles_6141708