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Rheumatic Heart Disease Epidemiology III. The San Luis Valley Prevalence Study By WILLiAm E. MORTON, M.D., DR.P.H., ARnxum L. WAwqIEm,, M.D., M.P.H., JOHN V. WEIL, M.D., CARLETON L. SHMOCK, JR., M.D., JOSEPH SNYDER, M.D., AND JoHN A. LicHTY, M.D., M.P.H. Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 SUMMARY After epidemiologic data had suggested the existence of a high-risk rheumatic fever (RF) region in Colorado, examination of 3,737 children in a careful prevalence study in that region, the San Luis Valley yielded 14 cases of rheumatic heart disease (RHD) for a prevalence rate of 3.7/1,000. This rate was significantly higher than the rate of 1.7/1,000 among Denver children of the same age screened by a similar method and followed for a similar period for ascertainment of diagnoses. Although the current high RHD risk in the San Luis Valley had been thought to be due to the relative impoverishment of this part of the state, the RHD and history-of-RF prevalence rates did not correlate with socioeconomic indices by county within the Valley as expected. An ethnic difference in RHD prevalence seen in Denver did not exist in the San Luis Valley, which led to speculation about (1) pattems of school attendance in small towns versus urban areas, and (2) the probability that the influence of poverty as an RHD-risk factor operates on a community rather than on a family or individual level. Additional Indexing Words: Rheumatic fever Ethnic group inicidence School children study seemed to be associated with poorer socioeconomic circumstances than elsewhere in the state in 1960. The mortality and morbidity statistics which constituted the majority of the data in that report were, by themselves, insufficient evidence of the reality of this apparent risk pattern, so that further proof was needed that the RF incidence or the RHD prevalence, or both were significantly higher in the San Luis Valley than elsewhere in Colorado. Because of the existence of a recent accurate estimate of RHD prevalence among Denver school children,2 3 it seemed that a reasonable estimate of comparative RHD risk could be obtained by a prevalence survey using similar methodology among San Luis Valley school children. We believed that RHD prevalence data could probably be obtained more quickly than incidence data for a disease as rare as RF is becoming in this country. Hopefully, the RHD prevalence study might IN A PRECEDING paper' epidemiologic data were reviewed which indicated that in the San Luis Valley of south central Colorado a higher risk of rheumatic fever (RF) and rheumatic heart disease (RHD) From the Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, University of Oregon Medical School, Portland, Oregon, and the Departments of Preventive Medicine and Medicine, University of Colorado Medical School, and the Colorado Department of Public Health, Denver, Colorado. Supported by the Colorado Heart Association and by the Chronic Disease Section of the Colorado Department of Public Health and was conducted during the senior author's tenure of the position of research epidemiologist for the supporting institutions. Address for reprints: William E. Morton, M.D., Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, University of Oregon Medical School, Portland, Oregon 97201. Received October 20, 1969; revision accepted for publication January 7, 1970. Circulation, Volume XLI, May 1970 Socioeconomic status 773 MORTON ET AL. 774 indicate whether the higher RF and RHD risks, if substantiated, were uniform or localized within the region. This paper describes the methods and results of that study in the San Luis Valley. Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 Methods With the approval of the San Luis Valley Medical Society and the county education officials, arrangements were made to examine all children in the fifth through the eighth grades in all public and parochial schools in all six counties in the San Luis Valley in January 1965. Extensive preliminary community education about the study and its purposes was conducted by the Colorado Heart Association. Since accurate heart disease prevalence estimates were the goals of the study, all students were examined independently by two experienced physicians to reduce the risk of overlooking cases. Examinations consisted of precordial auscultation on each student while in the erect and supine positions plus palpation of the femoral pulses as in previous studies.4 Although the Denver heart disease prevalence study had included electrocardiographic screening in addition to the physician screeners, funds and personnel were not available for such an intensive effort in the San Luis Valley. Based on previous experience, the omission of electrocardiographic screening in this study would be expected to lessen the observed prevalence rate of congenital heart disease (e.g., 10 of 80 CHD cases would have been missed in the Denver study had electrocardiographic screening been excluded) but to have little or no effect on the observed RHD rate (e.g., none of the 29 Denver RHD cases would have been missed if screening by electrocardiograms had not been used). Students judged to have definite or suspected heart disease by either primary examiner were reexamined in February 1965 by cardiologists who had, in addition, a 14 by 17-inch PA chest roentgenogram and a 14-lead electrocardiogram available. For a diagnosis of RHD to be established at secondary screening or follow-up examinations, a murmur was required to be of grade II/VI or more loudness, to have typical characteristics and radiation, not to be abolished by respiratory or position changes, to be accentuated by exercise, and to be agreed upon by two or more observers. Although the initial screeners were instructed to screen with a high index of suspicion, final diagnoses were applied by conservative standards, often after referral by the family physician for further studies. Family physicians were informed of the results of the reexamination by letter and handled the diagnos- tic and therapeutic referrals according to their usual practices. Individuals whose cardiac status remained uncertain after the cardiologists' examinations ("possible heart disease" or "probably normal, reexamine in 2 years") were usually told that their hearts were probably normal and activities need not be limited. Follow-up examinations 1T to 2 years later usually resolved the doubt in favor of normality, although in several instances, progression of auscultatory and electrocardiographic signs resulted in additional diagnoses which were not certain initially. Because these additional cases which resulted from the followup procedure had been originally identified as suspects in January 1965, they were regarded as components of the prevalence rates based on the original survey rather than as new cases manifested in the interval between survey and formal follow-up. It is understood that prevalence rates based on a survey which included persistent follow-up procedures would almost always be higher than rates based on the same survey without follow-up or with only brief follow-up procedures. Similar follow-up procedures were used for previous prevalence estimates among Denver parochial school children with which the San Luis Valley results are compared. Results Of the 3,751 students enrolled in grades 5 through 8 at the time of the examinations, 3,737 (99.6%) were examined. Refusals were commonest among older girls. According to table 1, 50.8% of the students examined were boys, and 52.7% belonged to the Hispano ethnic group ("Spanish-American," usually Spanish surnamed). Ethnic group age distributions in table 2 show that the Hispano children tended to be slightly older than the others in the same grades, a phenomenon noted previously by Dodge and co-workers.5 Table 1 San Luis Valley, Grades 5-8, January 1965: Sex and Ethnic Distributions of Students Examined Total Ethnic group Male Female Hispano Other white Oriental Negro Total 973 996 835 913 11 2 1899 a 2 1838 No. % of total 1969 1748 16 4 3737 52.7 46.8 0.4 0.1 100.0 Circulation, Volume XLI, May 1970 RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE EPIDEMIOLOGY Table 2 San Luis Valley, Grades 5-8, January 1965: Age and Ethnic Distributions of Students Examined Age (yr) Hispano Ethnic group Other white white Total 10 or less 11 12 13 14 15 or more 255 423 461 468 275 87 308 401 426 458 136 19 3 6 7 3 1 0 566 830 894 929 412 106 Total 1969 1748 20 3737 Non- Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 Fourteen cases of definite RHD were identified among the 3,737 students examined, a prevalence rate of 3.7/1,000. Pertinent characteristics of these 14 cases are listed in table 3. Five of the 14 were known to the current family physicians; four of the affected children were on a regular prophylactic penicillin regimen, and one had lapsed from prophylaxis. One case (case 1793), in which the sole apparent auscultatory valvular abnormality was mitral stenosis, is the only case of this type encountered during a school survey in the senior author's experience (three previous surveys produced 45 cases of RHD from screening of 25,749 children2' 6). None of the 14 school children with RHD had had cardiac catheterization or surgery as of June 1967. One (case 1923) had been seen at the University of Colorado Medical Center where our diagnosis was substantiated (U156416). For those readers concerned with our diagnostic standards, a description of several of the borderline RHD cases which were not counted in the prevalence rate will be instructive. Table 4 lists seven individuals whose borderline findings were insufficient to qualify as chronic rheumatic heart disease in this study. L. C. (case 951) was a stolid, welldeveloped, asymptomatic youth with a history of probable chorea and with two sisters who had had clinical rheumatic fever. He lived in a tiny mountain mining community about 40 miles from the nearest physician, and was one of 17 children whose father had chronic pulmonary disability. Rheumatic fever proCisrculasion, Volume XLI, May 1970 775 phylaxis was not being maintained for him or his two sisters. No murmurs were heard on careful auscultation at rest or after exercise. Resting blood pressure was 124/48 in the right arm, supine. The electrocardiogram showed nodal premature beats, QRS voltage indicative of left ventricular enlargement (Sv2 + Rv5 = 58 mm; RI, + RI,,= 55 mm), and sinus rhythm (45/min) at rest. After exertion (20 fast situps) the sinus rate remained fixed at 45/min, the ventricular rate speeded up to a regular high-nodal rhythm at 75 beats/min, and no premature beats were evident; the rhythm reverted to the pre-exercise pattern after 4 min of rest. The boy denied any symptoms, and his muscular development supported his claim of vigorous participation in sports. The clearly evident ECG abnormalities probably reflect rheumatic cardiac damage which had been present for some time, and a good argument could be entered for inclusion of this individual among those with definite RHD. E. R. (case 1533) was one of 11 children whose father had died in an auto accident. At the initial screening and reexamination in 1965 auscultatory signs were suggestive of aortic valve deformity but were not sufficient to be counted as a definite case of congenital heart disease (past history and family history were both negative for RF and RHD and there was no evidence of existing RF). At follow-up examination in November 1966 there was easy fatigue, low-grade fever, BP of 104/34 mm Hg in the left arm (previously 100/66), a grade III/VI harsh systolic murmur at the right upper sternal border, and a postexercise aortic ejection click. After treatment by the family physician, followed by maintenance of daily penicillin prophylaxis, reexamination in January 1967 disclosed disappearance of the easy fatigability and fever and the aortic ejection click. At this time BP was 120/66 mm Hg, the systolic murmur was softer but still distinctly abnormal, and the aortic component of the second sound was inaudible. This episode was interpreted as a relatively mild acute attack of rheumatic fever with aortic valvulitis superimposed on a probable congenital valvular deformity. Thirty years ago 776 MORTON ET AL. 1- 4) >, 0 .> 7z >,-4) 5 03 0 C) 4a .- .M -4-'.Cd 4 C) .,- C. W (1) w w -4 .q - Q c w v - -+--, -4-) -4-. -4 -4 92 X Go . -4 - - -4 -4 p - > > -4 S 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C4 PL4 P-. P., P-4 P-4 P-4 P-4 5 ._ P * * -4-D -4-;, -4--j -4 X rn 92 .G -4 , P- 4) Q (1) - in I- ce 0 m CL) -IC a0 Cd 0 s -a 0 4) NN -i cYM -I MOOO 0 .os-, Q3 a 00 0 0 000q-0 0 zzzzzzz m -4-- -4 -4-4 m d C Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 S )-4 ;s ~ w ~ e. Z P; 4 P c lO zPLa bf) 4e Q0 o O32 0 ;4 0 0 0 4 0 . .s 0.-2 ~~9-. ; ~ -- S . U .04- Q > . ;~I Ciclto, m0 0~03 0 0 ~~~0 .-0 00 l.) xo) C D ¾+.) 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .,3. -- . Q i .- A 0 0 0) 0 z ¢ z 0000Ca00 CS~~~~~Ii O0 CO P: P: CO 1 0o 00 0r- 00 co C t Oq cd ci 4 c: oueXI,My17 RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE EPIDEMIOLOGY .) Co .0 -4. . 4- 4- . i 0 00 c~) *;*> *P. *; i4- CD m4- X4 -4- 0 4-D i-o r- > 4-., --a5 C1) - Q ceo z0 z 0 z zz eb 00 z ;~o 0 00 o. o. Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 CO zz z zz '4-1 -. C¢ . v0s _s 0 cc ~ .~ 0 z >%o a r. as C1) Caac Q cO Q . -~as 0 0 OC) 0 *a)9 0 0 a 0 aco~0 =0 ; 0 +;} U2 0 .QQC- * 0 0 - v co C.e 0 0 > cd C3 0 4- this case would have been counted as RHD according to then-current diagnostic customs. In the Colorado statewide sixth-grade survey in 1949-51 this case would, quite probably, have been counted as a case of rheumatic and congenital heart disease. However, the pendulum of aortic valvular etiologic diagnosis continues to move, and currently most U. S. cardiologists would label this case as congenital heart disease as we did after considerable discussion. In case 1659, with no history of clinical rheumatic fever or signs of valvular heart disease, there was a strong family history of rheumatic fever and an arrhythmia of uncertain duration. At rest the child manifested a sinus pause every fifth or sixth beat followed by nodal escape with succeeding beats gradually returning to sinus origin. The heart sounds reflected the arrhythmia by corresponding cycles of split first sound and prominent third sound. Exercise (12 vigorous sit-ups) normalized the rhythm by auscultation and produced no other abnormalities. There was no history of paroxysmal tachycardia or "palpitations." D. R. (case 3756) had no history of clinical rheumatic fever, but her father had had rheumatic carditis in childhood. At the initial examination in early 1965 and again in December 1966 she had a prominent apical midsystolic click. When the girl was erect, the click was loudest at the apex and was transmitted to the lower left sternal border, the left infra-axillary area, and posteriorly to the left lung base. The click was inconstant when she was supine but it was unaffected by C) respiratory changes or by moderate exercise C1) (12 fast sit-ups). At the two initial 1965 examinations four observers agreed that no murmurs were audible, but by December 1966 two observers could hear a grade II/VI, higha) pitched, early systolic murmur at the apex and UL several centimeters laterally in the erect position only (normal first sound). One c: observer heard an inconstant, grade I/VI, a) Q~localized apical, mid-diastolic rumble in the Q0 In erect position. Since the systolic murmur was a cn, >~0 -4- - - -! -e o -4 0 ctz I C) pl0 s 0 0 < Circulation, Volume XLI, May 1970 0O CD X CDOCD 0 t 0D bCD E-N 777 778 MORTON ET AL. Table 5 San Luis Valley, Grades 5-8, January 1965: Age Distribution of Rheumatic Heart Disease and of a History of Past Acute Rheumatic Fever: Cases and Rates per 1,000 Examined Age (yr) 10 or less 11 12 13 14 or more Total Rheumatic heart disease Prevalence rates Cases Crude Smoothed* 2 1 3 8 0 1.2 3.4 8.6 0.0 2.1 2.6 4.5+ 4.7 5.5+ 14 3.7 3.9 3.5+ Past rheumatic fever Prevalence rates Cases Crude Smoothed* 20 23 26 35 17 35.3 27.7 29.1 37.7 32.8 30.8 30.1 31.7 33.3 35.9 121 32.4 32.2 *Rates smoothed by 3-level moving-mean method to compensate for spontaneous variations due to small numbers of cases. Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 Table 6 Ethnic Distributions of Rheumatic Heart Disease and of a History of Past Acute Rheumatic Fever among Students in Grades 5-8 in the San Luis Valley and in Denver Parochial Schools: Rates per 1,000 Examined Location and ethnic group San Luis Valley Hispano Other white Nonwhite Denver Hispano Other white Nonwhite Number examined 3737 1969 Rheumatic heart disease Cases Rates 14 7 7 0 1748 20 6470 11 1161 5108 202 less than pansystolic, and there was disagreement over the diastolic murmur, this girl was not counted as having a definite case of RHD. Table 5 shows that the overall prevalence rate of RHD was 3.7/1,000 examined, while a history of past acute rheumatic fever was found among 32.4/1,000 students. The latter rate was based on 121 individuals who, after careful review, had a reasonable history of clinical rheumatic fever diagnosed by a physician. We did not include 35 others for whom the diagnosis had been made by a nonmedical person, was probably misunderstood by the parent, or was probably mistaken. When the age-specific rates of RHD and of a history of RF were smoothed arithmetically to compensate for spontaneous fluctuations due to small numbers,2 then the 3 8 0 Cases 3.7 3.6 4.0 0.0 121 1.7 83 2.6 1.6 0.0 Past history of rheumatic fever Rates 52 69 0 18 63 2 32.6 26.4 39.5 0.0 12.8 15.5+ 12.3 9.9 tendencies of both to increase with age became more clearly apparent. To judge the frequencies of RHD and of a history of RF among these San Luis Valley children, we have compared these rates with rates observed about 2 years earlier among children of the same grade level in the Denver parochial schools (table 6). The prevalence rates of RHD and of a history of RF were both more than twice as high among the San Luis Valley children as among the Denver children (P < 0.001 for both comparisons). RHD prevalence did not differ significantly between Hispanos and Anglos (other whites) in the San Luis Valley (P > 0.25) or between Denver and the San Luis Valley among Hispanos (P > 0.05), but the RHD prevalence rate differed significantly between Hispanos and Anglos in Denver (P <0.005) and Circulation, Volume XLI, May 1970 RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE EPIDEMIOLOGY 779 Table 7 San Luis Valley Socioeconomic Indices from the 1960 U.S. Census* 1959 family income Mean 1959 income of all employed persons County Less than $10,000 or more $3,000 (% of families) (% of families) Alamosa Rio Grande Mineral Saguache Conejos Costilla $2,903 2,716 2,460 2,179 2,158 1,687 28.6 36.0 17.9 47.3 49.1 62.8 San Luis Valley Colorado $2,486 3,671 40.6 18.3 Education Persons aged Persons aged 14-17 yr 25 yr or more (% in (median school school) yr completed) 8.5+ 8.3 0.0 8.9 5.2 2.3 7.1 14.6 Population per household Ratio of nonworkers to workers 89.8 85.7 t 83.5 86.8 71.7 11.3 10.6 11.4 8.9 8.7 7.6 3.41 3.59 2.73 3.60 4.15 4.19 1.75 1.94 t 1.94 2.61 3.69 84.8 89.4 9.9 11.7 3.70 3.21 2.23 1.60 Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 *Means and percentages computed from population-weighted county data. County data obtained from U.S. Census of Population: 1960. Part 7. Colorado. U.S. Government Printing Office, 1962. tData not available. Table 8 San Luis Valley, Grades 5-8, January 1965: County Distribution* of Rheumatic Heart Disease and of a History of Past Acute Rheumatic Fever; Cases and Rates per 1,000 Examtined Rheumatic No. examined County Alamosa Rio Grande Mineral Saguache 905 1,073 Conejos Costilla Total for San Luis Cases Valley 31 421 910 397 2 1 0 4 7 0 3,737 14 heart disease Rates 2.2 0.9 0.0 9.5+ 7.7 0.0 3.8 History of rheumatic fever Cases Rates 46 24 3 11 28 9 50.8 22.4 96.8 26.1 30.8 22.7 121 32.4 *Counties arranged in order from highest to lowest socioeconomic rank; see table 7. between Denver and the San Luis Valley among Anglos (P <0.001). All the foregoing comparisons for prevalence of a history of rheumatic fever were highly significant (P < 0.005), although the reliability of a past history of RF did not approach the reliability of our identifications of RHD. Since we postulated socioeconomic stress as a major determinant of the San Luis Valley's high RHD risk, it was only natural to inspect the range of values of the socioeconomic indices within the valley (table 7) before considering the county-specific RHD prevalence rates. With the exception of Mineral County, all of these counties ranked poorer than the Colorado mean values in the percentCirculation, Volume XLI, May 1970 age of families with income less than $3,000/ year. Also, all the counties except Mineral seemed to fit readily into a rough order from least to most poverty-stricken (top to bottom of table 7). Unfortunately, methodologic limitations prevented the direct accumulation of socioeconomic data for each examined child. When tabulated by county (table 8), the RHD prevalence rate exceeds the Valley average in Conejos and Saguache counties and is lower than average in Alamosa, Costilla, Mineral, and Rio Grande counties. The two counties with high RHD prevalence rates are not contiguous; Saguache County lies at the northern end of the Valley, the Conejos MORTON ET AL. 780 Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 County is one of two at the southern end. The small numbers for each county make one wary of sampling error. In surprising contrast, the frequency of a history of RF was highest in Mineral and Alamosa counties. The small numbers in Mineral County allow one to question the reliability of this rate, but perhaps it is significant that the county seat of Alamosa County is the largest town and probably the commercial center of the San Luis Valley. To compound the discrepancy between prevalence rates of RHD and of a history of RF, neither rate correlates directly with the socioeconomic indices shown in table 7. Despite the significantly higher prevalence rate of RHD in the San Luis Valley than in Denver, the number of RHD cases was still exceeded by the number of cases of congenital cardiovascular malformations among the San Luis Valley students: 26 cases or a prevalence rate of 7.0/1,000 examined. These included several cases of particular interest and will be described in a future publication. Discussion As of 1963-67 the prevalence rate of RHD in school children in grades 5 through 8 was significantly higher in the San Luis Valley than in Denver according to the results of two extensive studies which employed similar screening methods and similar periods of follow-up for ascertainment of diagnoses. In agreement, though less reliable, is the significantly higher frequency- of a history of RF among children in the San Luis Valley than in Denver. This geographic difference probably did not exist in 1949-51, according to the evidence gathered in a statewide survey of sixth grade students," 5 and its duration in the future is uncertain, possibly dependent upon economic and sociocultural factors. Although the data which led to this investigation in the San Luis Valley had strongly suggested that socioeconomic factors were at fault, this study has revealed no simple socioeconomic correlation within the Valley. In Costilla County, the poorest in the Valley by a noticeable margin (table 7), no RHD cases were identified and the prevalence rate for history of RF was below average. The two counties with high RHD rates, Conejos and Saguache, had average RF history rates and slightly below-average mean income values. The surprisingly high RF history rate in Alamosa County, the "wealthiest" in the Valley, might be explained by (1) more frequent visits to physicians and greater chance of diagnosis of RF, or by (2) higher RF incidence rate associated with more frequent streptococcal transmission due to higher rates of interpersonal contacts in residents of the commercial center of the Valley. We have shown previously that in Denver the socioeconomic distribution of the Hispanos was strongly skewed toward the lower end of the scale in comparison to other whites (Anglos).2 3 Although the more limited census data available from the San Luis Valley did not permit an exact comparison, there was no question but that a similar ethnic-socioeconomic contrast existed in the San Luis Valley as well. A major social difference observable in these two surveys was that in Denver most of the impoverished Hispano children attended ghetto schools with others from similar circumstances, whereas impoverished Hispanos in the San Luis Valley usually attended the only school in town along with the complete spectrum of other children. This difference is presented as the probable reason for the high RHD prevalence rate in both Hispanos and Anglos in the San Luis Valley and for the significantly higher RHD rate among Hispanos than Anglos in Denver. This phenomenon suggests that perhaps the influence of poverty on occurrence of RHD operates on a community level rather than an individual or family level. In a poor small community (or in those poor small communities with high RHD risk) the risk may apply fairly uniformly to all persons, no matter what their individual levels of wealth may happen to be. In cities large enough to have socially "functional" ghettos, the high RHD risk may be sequestered within the ghetto. This concept Circulation, Volume XUL, May 1970 781 RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE EPIDEMIOLOGY Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 requires more specific data for firm acceptance. This study's confirmation of the suspicions raised by analysis of the routinely available mortality and morbidity data indicate that, at least in Colorado, more attention should be paid to the routine statistics collected by the state health department. It would follow, too, that RF control programs based on exceedingly finite funds and personnel might be most effective if applied in regions where the need appears greatest. Further, routine attention to data such as these would permit recognition of non-effective control programs and measurement of the benefits of effective control programs. Objective quantitative data are just as valuable for the diagnosis and treatment of health problems of the community as for the diagnosis and treatment of health problems of the individual. Circulation, Volume XLI, May 1970 References 1. MORTON WE, LICHTY JA: Rheumatic heart disease epidemiology: II. Colorado's high-risk low-socioeconomic region in 1960. Submitted to Amer J Epidem 2. MORTON WE, HUHN LA, LICHTY JA: Rheumatic heart disease epidemiology: I. Observations in 17,366 Denver school children. JAMA 199: 879, 1967 3. MORTON WE: Ethnic classification error in a heart disease prevalence study among Denver parochial students. Submitted to Public Health Reports MORTON WE, HUHN LA: Heart disease detection 4. in school children. Amer J Cardiol 16: 688, 1965 5. DODGE HJ, MARESH GJ, MoRRs NM: Prevalence of heart disease in relation to some population characteristics of Colorado school children. Amer J Public Health 48: 62, 1958 6. MORTON W: Heart disease prevalence in two Colorado communities. Amer J Public Health 52: 991, 1962 Rheumatic Heart Disease Epidemiology: III. The San Luis Valley Prevalence Study WILLIAM E. MORTON, ARTHUR L. WARNER, JOHN V. WEIL, CARLETON L. SHMOCK, JR., JOSEPH SNYDER and JOHN A. LICHTY Downloaded from http://circ.ahajournals.org/ by guest on April 30, 2017 Circulation. 1970;41:773-781 doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.41.5.773 Circulation is published by the American Heart Association, 7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, TX 75231 Copyright © 1970 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. Print ISSN: 0009-7322. Online ISSN: 1524-4539 The online version of this article, along with updated information and services, is located on the World Wide Web at: http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/41/5/773 Permissions: Requests for permissions to reproduce figures, tables, or portions of articles originally published in Circulation can be obtained via RightsLink, a service of the Copyright Clearance Center, not the Editorial Office. Once the online version of the published article for which permission is being requested is located, click Request Permissions in the middle column of the Web page under Services. Further information about this process is available in the Permissions and Rights Question and Answer document. Reprints: Information about reprints can be found online at: http://www.lww.com/reprints Subscriptions: Information about subscribing to Circulation is online at: http://circ.ahajournals.org//subscriptions/