According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the mortality rate for people with heart disease is the lowest of any ethnic or racial group in the country, with only 3.7 deaths per 100,000 people per year. If any of these deaths were prevented, the number would go up to 4.9 per 100,000.
That’s the conclusion of two studies by the American Heart Association and the American Stroke Association. The results of the study were published in the New England Journal of Medicine. It seems that the heart disease death rate is almost as low as it is for the general population, and it’s not just because we’ve had so many heart attacks in the last few years.
The point of the study was to determine if stroke risk factors were related to overall mortality, or if just risk factors could be reduced. This study is a bit controversial because the authors found that the number of deaths per year from stroke did not correlate with the number of deaths per year from all other causes. This means that the overall stroke death rate might be higher than the risk factors.
The study itself is a bit of a mixed bag, with some good news and some bad news. The good news is that the authors found that the number of deaths per year from stroke was associated with the number of deaths per year from all other causes. The bad news is that the authors also found that these factors were worse for men than for women.
While the researchers did find some relationship between the number of deaths per year from stroke and the number of deaths per year from all other causes, the relationship was weak. The researchers also found that stroke deaths were more likely to be fatal when the number of deaths per year from other causes was higher than when the number of deaths per year from stroke was.
The researchers also found that stroke deaths were more likely to be fatal when the number of deaths per year from other causes was higher than when the number of deaths per year from stroke was.
Strokes are the leading cause of death for people of average to above average age. For people in their 50s, the risk of stroke is about the same as that from heart disease. The researchers determined that a person’s risk of dying from stroke is about the same as being five years younger than their age.
It’s interesting to note that the risk of dying from a stroke is the same as being 5 years older. Of course, this doesn’t necessarily mean that there’s a causal relationship between stroke and age, but it does mean that you would be more likely to die from a stroke if you were 5 years older.
The researchers also found a much higher risk of death from any one of a range of other conditions, including diabetes, hypertension, asthma, depression, and dementia.
Well, we all know how well we can live with a disability, so we just don’t think it matters too much. But the results of this study do seem to indicate that you might be more vulnerable to a stroke if you’re younger. But you know what? It doesn’t really matter because you’d still probably live to be a hundred and have a stroke or two.