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The Rankings

3D Rankins View

Want to see how all states stack up on a certain measure?  View by year?  Or maybe compare two states?  Simply use the dropdown menus to make your selections to narrow or expand your results.

Vermont
Cardiac Heart Disease: 2011

Although cardiac heart disease prevalence has experienced a slight decline in recent years, it remains the leading cause of death in the United States for both men and women. It’s important to keep cholesterol levels and blood pressure in check to prevent cardiac heart disease.

There are five diseases included in a the broader category of chronic diseases: cardiac heart disease, high cholesterol, heart attack, stroke and hypertension (high blood pressure). These diseases are long-term illnesses that many individuals can manage through lifestyle changes and healthcare interventions. However, they do place a burden on many of the affected individuals by constraining options and activities available to them and can result in expensive and ongoing expenditures for health care.

All measures are self-reported by respondents to the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.

Resources for heart and vascular diseases are at National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute as well as at the Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, CDC.

Take Action

The measures tracked by America's Health Rankings are those actions that can affect the future health of the population. For a state to improve the health of its population, efforts must focus on these measures, these determinants of health.

Vermont Cardiac Heart Disease (2006-2011)
  • Percent of adults who responded yes to the question "Have you ever been told by a doctor that you have angina or coronary heart disease?"
Edition Rank Value
2011 - Vermont 12 3.7