Black Health
Cardiovascular Mortality Ranked 11 of 51

Black cardiovascular mortality in Missouri

372.50

per 100,000, age-adjusted

Age-adjusted cardiovascular mortality among Black residents of Missouri: 372.5 deaths per 100,000 (CDC WONDER, ICD-10 I00-I99).

US national average: 216.30 per 100,000, age-adjusted

Primary source: dataset

Historical trend

2014: 413.52015: 4062016: 398.62017: 391.12018: 387.42019: 379.92020: 391.12021: 383.72022: 376.22023: 372.5370.5382.2394405.8417.6201420192023

What this means for Black residents

That figure runs materially above the US national average of 216.3 per 100,000 (age-adjusted).

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among Black residents of Missouri, as it is nationally. The Black-white CVD mortality gap begins decades earlier than it does in the white population — Black men in their 40s already show elevated CVD mortality compared to white men of the same age. The drivers are well-established in the literature: earlier onset of hypertension and diabetes, poorer blood-pressure control rates in primary care, and lower access to cardiology after a cardiac event. Evidence-based interventions include team-based hypertension management in primary care (the Kaiser Permanente and the Yale Primary Care Collaborative both document 70%+ control rates using this approach) and community-pharmacy blood-pressure monitoring.

The figures on this page are drawn from CDC WONDER Underlying Cause of Death, which is the canonical public dataset for this indicator. See the References section below for supporting citations from MMWR, NEJM, and JAMA where the underlying drivers have been studied.

Policy actions

Policy levers at the state level for this indicator include Medicaid coverage scope, provider workforce investments, and data transparency mandates. The state's health department publishes the specific programs currently funded via its annual state health plan.

Where to get help in your state

References & primary sources

  1. Primary dataset: CDC WONDER Underlying Cause of Death
  2. Van Dyke ME et al. Heart Disease Death Rates Among Blacks and Whites by US County. Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2018.
  3. American Heart Association. Status of Cardiovascular Health in African Americans. 2017 Scientific Statement.

Data refreshed: