Poorer countries, those spending less on health care have more strokes, deaths

October 27, 2011 in Cardiology

Poorer countries and those that spend proportionately less money on health care have more stroke and stroke deaths than wealthier nations and those that allocate more to health care, according to new research in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.

Poorer countries also had a greater incidence of — caused by a burst blood vessel bleeding in or near the brain — and had more frequent onset at younger ages.

Regardless of overall wealth, countries that spend less money proportionately on also had higher incidences of all four outcomes.

"Not only is the economic wellness of a country important, but also significant is what proportion of their gross domestic product is expended on health," said Luciano A. Sposato, M.D., M.B.A., study lead author and director of the neurology department at the Vascular Research Institute at INECO Foundation in Buenos Aires, Argentina. "This is very important for developing healthcare strategies to prevent stroke and other cardiovascular diseases."

In the large-scale literature review, researchers took a unique approach to identify stroke risk by correlating it to nationwide socioeconomic status.

Previous research tended to focus on the link between stroke and individual or family financial standing, said Sposato, also director of the Stroke Center at the Institute of Neurosciences, University Hospital Favaloro Foundation.

The study linked lower gross domestic product to:

  • 32 percent higher risk of strokes;
  • 43 percent increase of post-stroke deaths at 30 days;
  • 43 percent increase in hemorrhagic stroke; and
  • 47 percent higher incidence of younger-age-onset stroke.
Similarly, a lower percentage of health spending correlated to a comparable increase in the 30-day death rate and:
  • 26 percent higher risk of strokes;
  • 45 percent increase of post-stroke deaths at 30 days;
  • 32 percent increase in hemorrhagic stroke;
  • 36 percent higher incidence of younger-age-onset stroke.
Investigators analyzed 30 population-based studies conducted between 1998 and 2008 in 22 countries. They used statistical methods to link stroke risk, 30-day death rate, hemorrhagic stroke incidence and age at disease onset to three internationally accepted economic indicators. The indicators included gross domestic product, health expenditure per capita and unemployment rate. Unlike the other two indicators, unemployment rate didn't affect stroke or other outcomes.

"It is important to further discuss the health priorities for different countries," said Gustavo Saposnik, M.D., M.Sc., study co-author and director of stroke outcomes research at St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto, Canada. "This will provide the necessary background to help countries make the changes in how different resources and are allocated."

Stroke is the fourth leading cause of death in the United States and a major cause of long-term disability. Worldwide, is the second leading killer.

Provided by American Heart Association search and more info website

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