The long-term effects of a cardiovascular disease prevention trial: the Stanford Five-City Project.
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 86 (12) , 1773-1779
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.86.12.1773
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This study examined long-term effects of a health-education intervention trial to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. METHODS: Surveys were conducted in California in two treatment and two control cities at baseline (1979/1980), after the 6-year intervention (1985/1986), and 3 years later at follow-up (1989/1990). Net treatment/control differences in risk-factor change were assessed for women and men 25 to 74 years of age. RESULTS: Blood pressure improvements observed in all cities from baseline to the end of the intervention were maintained during the follow-up in treatment but not control cities. Cholesterol levels continued to decline in all cities during follow-up. Smoking rates leveled out or increased slightly in treatment cities and continued to decline in control cities but did not yield significant net differences. Both coronary heart disease and all-cause mortality risk scores were maintained or continued to improve in treatment cities while leveling out or rebounding in control cities. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that community-based cardiovascular disease prevention trials can have sustained effects. However, the modest net differences in risk factors suggest the need for new designs and interventions that will accelerate positive risk-factor change.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- A multivariate analysis of the risk of coronary heart disease in FraminghamPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- The capacity-building approach to intervention maintenance implemented by the Stanford Five-City ProjectHealth Education Research, 1994
- Program evaluation strategies for community-based health promotion programs: perspectives from the cardiovascular disease community research and demonstration studiesHealth Education Research, 1994
- Trends in Serum Cholesterol Levels from 1980 to 1987New England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Effects of communitywide education on cardiovascular disease risk factors. The Stanford Five-City ProjectJAMA, 1990
- The 10-year incidence of overweight and major weight gain in US adultsArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1990
- Social class disparities in risk factors for disease: Eight-year prevalence patterns by level of educationPreventive Medicine, 1990
- Social Marketing and Public Health InterventionHealth Education Quarterly, 1988
- Indirect measures of cigarette use: expired-air carbon monoxide versus plasma thiocyanatePreventive Medicine, 1984
- COMMUNITY EDUCATION FOR CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTHThe Lancet, 1977