From 9aed87c3bfa9b65b3975a36a87b1ee362420542f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Teleo Agents Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2026 04:56:37 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] pipeline: archive 1 source(s) post-merge Pentagon-Agent: Epimetheus <3D35839A-7722-4740-B93D-51157F7D5E70> --- ...lity-trends-2010-2022-update-final-data.md | 81 +++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 81 insertions(+) create mode 100644 inbox/archive/health/2024-xx-ajpm-cvd-mortality-trends-2010-2022-update-final-data.md diff --git a/inbox/archive/health/2024-xx-ajpm-cvd-mortality-trends-2010-2022-update-final-data.md b/inbox/archive/health/2024-xx-ajpm-cvd-mortality-trends-2010-2022-update-final-data.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..fb5293b6 --- /dev/null +++ b/inbox/archive/health/2024-xx-ajpm-cvd-mortality-trends-2010-2022-update-final-data.md @@ -0,0 +1,81 @@ +--- +type: source +title: "Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Trends, 2010–2022: An Update with Final Data" +author: "American Journal of Preventive Medicine" +url: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11757076/ +date: 2024-09-01 +domain: health +secondary_domains: [] +format: article +status: processed +priority: high +tags: [CVD-mortality, cardiovascular, stagnation, midlife, working-age, excess-deaths, COVID, 2010-2022, AJPM] +--- + +## Content + +Published 2024 in *American Journal of Preventive Medicine* (update of the 2023 preliminary analysis with final NVSS data). PubMed ID: 39321995. + +**Study design:** Analysis of National Vital Statistics System final Multiple Cause of Death files for US adults aged ≥35 years, 2010–2022. Calculated age-adjusted mortality rates (AAMR) and excess deaths 2020–2022. + +**Key findings:** + +**Overall trajectory:** +- CVD AAMR declined **8.9%** from 2010 to 2019 (456.6 → 413.0 per 100,000) +- Then **increased 9.3%** from 2019 to 2022 to **454.5 per 100,000** +- The 2022 AAMR approximates the **2010 rate** — the entire decade of CVD progress was erased + +**Age ≥35 specific 2022 figure:** +- CVD AAMR (adults ≥35): **434.6 per 100,000 in 2022** (down from 451.8 in 2021 peak) +- The most recent year with a similarly high CVD AAMR was **2012** (434.7 per 100,000) +- So in 2022, we were at CVD mortality levels not seen since 2012 — a 10-year setback + +**Midlife impact:** +- Adults aged **35–54**: Increases from 2019 to 2022 **"eliminated the reductions achieved over the preceding decade"** +- Adults aged **65–74**: Same pattern — decade of gains erased +- This is the most significant finding for the harvesting-vs-structural question: COVID harvesting would primarily affect the very old; elimination of gains in 35–54 suggests structural causes beyond harvesting + +**Excess deaths:** +- **228,524 excess CVD deaths** from 2020 to 2022 +- That's **9% more CVD deaths** than expected based on 2010–2019 trends +- Even if some are COVID-direct (COVID-induced MI, stroke), the working-age pattern is inconsistent with pure harvesting + +**2023 data (partial, from other NCHS sources):** +- All-cause mortality AAMR decreased 6.0% from 2022 to 2023 (798.8 → 750.5 per 100,000) +- CVD in this NCHS data brief shows 2022 "still above pre-pandemic 2019 levels" for cardiometabolic component +- 2023 improvements likely reflect COVID dissipation, not CVD structural reversal + +**Companion paper — AJPM 2023 (excess deaths 2010–2022 preliminary):** +- Same team, preliminary data: same 228,524 excess deaths finding, 9% excess +- 2024 update confirms with final data: the preliminary estimates were accurate + +**Companion paper — PNAS 2023 "double jeopardy":** +- "US is experiencing a 'double jeopardy' driven by both mid-life and old age mortality trends, but more so by older-age mortality" +- This nuances the midlife focus: older-age is the larger driver numerically, but midlife is the more structural signal + +## Agent Notes + +**Why this matters:** This closes the "COVID harvesting test" thread from Sessions 14-15. The key question was: is the 2022 CVD AAMR still elevated above pre-pandemic levels, or has harvesting run its course? Answer: **2022 is at the 2012 level** — a 10-year setback. The 35–54 age group's erasure of an entire decade's gains is the most important data point for the structural interpretation. COVID harvesting affects the frail and elderly; working-age CVD increases from 2019–2022 suggest structural disease load, not just mortality timing. + +**What surprised me:** The "double jeopardy" framing from PNAS — the LE stagnation is driven MORE by older-age than midlife. This complicates the narrative that midlife structural failure is the primary driver. However, the older-age component may itself be the long-term consequence of midlife structural failure in earlier cohorts (accumulated cardiometabolic damage from the 1990s-2010s reaching expression at age 65+). + +**What I expected but didn't find:** Hypertension-specific sub-analysis in this paper. The AJPM paper covers CVD overall and subtypes (IHD, stroke). For hypertension-specific CVD sub-type trends, the JACC 2025 data from Session 15 remains the primary source. + +**KB connections:** +- `hypertension-related-cvd-mortality-doubled-2000-2023-despite-available-treatment...` — this AJPM paper covers overall CVD; the hypertension doubling is the specific sub-type claim +- Sessions 10-15 accumulated: AJE Abrams stagnation, PNAS 2026 cohort mortality, CDC 2024 LE record — this AJPM paper provides the INTERMEDIATE data (2022 setback, 2023 partial recovery) +- The harvesting test is now partially resolved: midlife 35-54 gains erasure suggests structural not just harvesting + +**Extraction hints:** +- New claim: "US cardiovascular disease AAMR in 2022 returned to 2012 levels, erasing a decade of progress — with adults 35–54 experiencing elimination of the preceding decade's CVD gains, consistent with structural disease load rather than COVID harvesting" +- This should be extracted as an update/amendment to the stagnation cluster, not a standalone new claim + +**Context:** This is the "with final data" update — preferred over the 2023 preliminary analysis. The 2024 paper is definitive for the 2010-2022 period. + +## Curator Notes + +PRIMARY CONNECTION: `hypertension-related-cvd-mortality-doubled-2000-2023-despite-available-treatment-indicating-behavioral-sdoh-failure.md` (and the broader CVD stagnation cluster) + +WHY ARCHIVED: Closes the COVID harvesting test thread. Confirms the 2022 CVD AAMR is at 2012 levels with the 35-54 age group showing full decade erasure — key evidence for structural vs. transient interpretation of CVD stagnation. + +EXTRACTION HINT: This is a data update to the stagnation cluster, not a new standalone claim. The extractor should enrich the existing stagnation claims with the midlife 35-54 "decade of gains erased" finding. The PNAS "double jeopardy" framing (older-age more numerically significant than midlife) should be noted as a scope qualifier.