Where you live impacts stroke survival

Published: March. 28, 2008 at 10:28 PM

WASHINGTON, March 28 (UPI) -- Where you live in the United States can help determine whether you live or die if you have a stroke, U.S. government researchers said.

The report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said a significant number of Medicare beneficiaries live in counties that have no access to care or inadequate choices for emergency healthcare when they suffer a stroke.

The atlas shows that some 21 percent of counties have no hospital, 31 percent lacked a hospital with an emergency department and 77 percent did not have a hospital with neurology services.

"Examples of community conditions that can influence a person's risk for stroke include the availability of affordable healthy food, safe options for physical activity, access to high quality healthcare, and anti-smoking legislation and policies," lead author Michele Casper of the CDC said in a statement.

The report was presented in Washington at a town hall meeting held by The National Forum for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention and the National Association of County and City Health Officials.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
NBA: Toronto 118, New Jersey 95 (32 min)
Bundchen and Brady name baby Benjamin (47 min)
Weather threat changes Ravens game time
Mangino settles with Kansas University
Woods named PGA Tour player of the year
College bowl season opens Saturday
Doc Holliday named Marshall football coach
fark
800 sheep and 40 cattle killed by Walla tip fire. BBQ trifecta is sick due to overeating
Unknown number of hogs become instabacon in farm fire. Accidental BBQ trifecta complete
Cat chewing is draining Yemen's water supply
ACLU cancels Christmas, kids devastated
Today's "Mugshot Roundup"? Watta buncha maroons
Man uses cows to defraud banks. Cops heard about it, had a beef with him and branded him a criminal....