Strong Heart Study (SHS)
What is the goal of the SHS?
The Strong Heart Study (SHS) is a study of cardiovascular disease and its risk factors among American Indian men and women, and is one of the largest epidemiological studies of American Indians ever undertaken. Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death for American Indians overall. The prevalence and severity of cardiovascular disease among American Indians has been particularly challenging to study due to the small size of American Indian communities, as well as the relatively young age, cultural diversity, and wide geographic distribution of the population. The SHS is designed to overcome challenges to estimating cardiovascular disease mortality and morbidity, as well as the prevalence of known and suspected cardiovascular disease risk factors, among American Indians. The study also works to assess the significance of these risk factors over an extended period of time.
In the early 1980s, a review of existing data by the Subcommittee on Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease of the Secretary of Health and Human Service’s Task Force on Black and Minority Health concluded that information on cardiovascular disease in American Indians was inadequate and strongly recommended epidemiologic studies of this problem. In response, and with collaboration from members of the participating American Indian communities, the SHS began.
The SHS is one of several NHLBI-supported studies designed to improve the cardiovascular health of American Indians.
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Improving American Indian heart health. Learn more about the impact of the Strong Heart Study in American Indian communities.
AT A GLANCE
- The SHS is the largest and longest study of heart disease and risk factors for American Indians.
- The study found that heart disease among American Indians has increased over the past 50 years and is now double that of the general U.S. population.
- The SHS has had more than 2,600 participants from 12 American Indian communities from Arizona, Oklahoma, and North and South Dakota.
- Study findings have helped show the impact of diabetes on heart structure and function and have contributed to the cardiology field for years.
What are the key findings from the SHS?
The SHS has identified several risk factors that may account for the high rates of heart disease in American Indian populations. As with the general population, key risk factors include having type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol, as well as engaging in smoking. However, the study identified unique factors, such as having albuminuria, or high amounts of albumin protein in the urine. Such factors have led to new clinical calculators that doctors can use to assess the risk of developing coronary heart disease and diabetes.
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Strong Heart Study (SHS)
How is the SHS conducted?
The study includes 12 American Indian tribes and communities in three geographic areas: Arizona; Oklahoma; and North and South Dakota. In its initial stages, the SHS included three components. The first was a survey to determine cardiovascular disease mortality rates from 1984 to 1994 among tribal members aged 35 to 74 years who lived in the three study areas. The second was the clinical examination of 4,549 eligible tribal members. The third component was the morbidity and mortality surveillance of these 4,549 participants. The SHS has completed three clinical exams of the original cohort. Because genetics plays an important role in cardiovascular diseases, the SHS has expanded its research into genetic epidemiology with its Strong Heart Family Study (SHFS).
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Strong Heart Study (SHS)
FEATURE
Similar to other groups in the United States, many American Indians today have become disconnected from their traditional ways of eating. Canned meats and sugary snacks have largely replaced healthy diets once rich in fresh fruits and vegetables. That shift, along with increasingly sedentary lifestyles, has dramatically affected the health of many now living in rural communities.