The Legacy of Slavery and Contemporary Declines in Heart Disease Mortality in the US South
Abstract
Background: This study aims to characterize the role of county-specific legacy of
slavery in patterning temporal (i.e., 1968-2014), and geographic (i.e., Southern counties)
declines in heart disease mortality. In this context, the U.S. has witnessed dramatic
declines in heart disease mortality since the 1960’s, which have benefitted place
and race groups unevenly, with slower declines in the South, especially for the Black
population. Methods: Age-adjusted race- and county-specific mortality rates from 1968-2014
for all diseases of the heart were calculated for all Southern U.S. counties. Candidate
confounding and mediating covariates from 1860, 1930, and 1970, were combined with
mortality data in multivariable regression models to estimate the ecological association
between the concentration of slavery in1860 and declines in heart disease mortality
from 1968-2014. Results: Black populations, in counties with a history of highest
versus lowest concentration of slavery, experienced a 17% slower decline in heart
disease mortality. The association for Black populations varied by region (stronger
in Deep South than Upper South states) and was partially explained by intervening
socioeconomic factors. In models accounting for spatial autocorrelation, there was
no association between slave concentration and heart disease mortality decline for
Whites. Conclusions: Nearly 50 years of declining heart disease mortality is a major
public health success, but one marked by uneven progress by place and race. At the
county level, progress in heart disease mortality reduction among Blacks is associated
with place-based historical legacy of slavery. Effective and equitable public health
prevention efforts should consider the historical context of place and the social
and economic institutions that may play a role in facilitating or impeding diffusion
of prevention efforts thereby producing heart healthy places and populations.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15175Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.ssmph.2017.07.004Publication Info
Kramer, MR; Black, NC; Matthew, SA; & James, SA (2017). The Legacy of Slavery and Contemporary Declines in Heart Disease Mortality in the
US South. SSM - Population Health. 10.1016/j.ssmph.2017.07.004. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15175.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Sherman A. James
Susan B. King Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Public Policy
Sherman A. James is the Susan B. King Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Public Policy
at the Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University. He also held secondary professorships,
at Duke, in Sociology, Community and Family Medicine, and African and African American
Studies. Prior to Duke, he taught in the epidemiology departments at the University
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (1973-89) and at the University of Michigan (1989-03).
At Michigan, he was the John P. Kirscht Collegiate Professor

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