Those born between 1965 and 1974 – known as generation X – have a 43 percent higher risk of stroke, compared to the Golden Generation.
A stroke results from a blood clot or blocked blood vessel in the brain which starves the brain for oxygen. Stroke is the fifth leading cause of death in America, according to the CDC.
The researchers compared stroke data from 225,000 people representing both generation groups. The results revealed the following:
- Stroke rates more than doubled in people 35 to 39 (a nearly 2.5-fold increase).
- Stroke rates doubled in people aged 40 to 44.
- Stroke rates increased by about 68 percent in people aged 45 to 54.
- Stroke rates declined in all age groups over 55 between 1995 and 2014.
The older generation appears to benefit from blood pressure lowering medication, along with cholesterol-lowering medication. Furthermore, the baby boomers benefited from dodging the obesity and diabetes epidemics, which impacted the generations that followed.
Swerdel explained, “If we look back at U.S. history, there was a big push towards adding a lot of sugar to food. For instance, sugared cereals didn’t become popular until the early 1960s. The rates of obesity and diabetes in these younger groups may be a function of that.”
Some researchers suggest that because the blood pressure movement began around the 1970s, the younger generation has yet to benefit from the messages it conveys. Daniel Lackland, a professor and director of translational neuroscience and population studies, added, “Today, we have a significant number of pediatricians who come asking, ‘How do I diagnose and treat adult hypertension, because that’s what I’m seeing in my pediatric patients.’ Everybody should have their blood pressure measured, and everybody should know their blood pressure.”
The findings were published in Journal of the American Heart Association.