Quick Facts
Date:
1948 - present

Framingham Heart Study, long-term research project developed to identify risk factors of cardiovascular disease, the findings of which had far-reaching impacts on medicine. Indeed, much common knowledge about heart disease—including the effects of smoking, diet, and exercise—can be traced to the Framingham study. The study’s findings further emphasized the need for preventing, detecting, and treating risk factors of cardiovascular disease in their earliest stages.

The Framingham Heart Study began in 1948. It was named for Framingham, a town in eastern Massachusetts that had been selected as the site of the study. The project was initiated under the direction of the National Heart Institute, which was newly established in 1948 (renamed the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [NHLBI] in 1976). From 1971, through a contract with the institute, the study was carried out in collaboration with the Boston University School of Medicine.

Study cohorts

The Framingham study was designed to track health information on men and women who initially did not show signs of heart disease. The original cohort (study group) included two-thirds of the adult population (more than 5,200 residents) of Framingham, with ages ranging from 30 to 62 years. Every two years people enrolled in the study submitted to medical tests and answered detailed questions about their lifestyle. Over the course of the study, researchers kept records of which individuals developed heart disease and which did not, and they studied the connections between disease and the data that had been collected.

In 1971 more than 5,120 new recruits, referred to as the Offspring Cohort, were added to the study; the cohort was made up of adult children of individuals in the original study group and their spouses. In 2001 a Third Generation Cohort, consisting of individuals who had at least one parent in the Offspring Cohort, was added. From the 1990s the study also included Omni Cohorts, which consisted of minority individuals. The original Omni Cohort included individuals living in the Framingham community, with later cohorts including individuals both related and unrelated to the initial participants.

Findings and impacts

The findings of the Framingham Heart Study produced a revolution in preventive cardiovascular medicine and greatly influenced scientists’ understanding of the origins of heart disease. Numerous research papers based on the study’s data were published in the scientific literature, and the study inspired clinical trials that were crucial to advancing the management of heart disease and its prevention. The Framingham study also provided data that were used for the investigation of cancer, stroke, osteoporosis, arthritis, dementia, diabetes mellitus, and eye disease as well as for the study of inheritance and genetic patterns of common diseases.

Information gained from analyses of the Framingham cohorts changed the views of the scientific community about heart disease. For instance, before the study most physicians believed that atherosclerosis was an inherent part of the aging process such that blood pressure would be expected to increase with age. The Framingham data suggested otherwise, that atherosclerosis is an arterial abnormality rather than a normal part of aging.

The Framingham study also solidified the relationship between high cholesterol levels and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The data revealed a strong positive association between low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and coronary heart disease and uncovered the protective effect of high-density lipoproteins (HDLs). Researchers were also able to use the data to identify genes that regulate cholesterol metabolism, facilitating the discovery of mechanisms by which genes contribute to common metabolic disorders, including obesity, hypertension (high blood pressure), and diabetes. The study enabled researchers to create a DNA library from blood samples collected from more than 5,000 individuals of two different generations; the DNA library aided the study of disease inheritance and the discovery of genes associated with disease.

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In addition, research on blood pressure based on the Framingham cohorts dispelled misconceptions. Before the Framingham study, it was thought that women and the elderly tolerated high blood pressure relatively well, with little consequence on cardiovascular health. However, after analyzing the Framingham data, researchers found no evidence to support the contention that the elderly fare better than younger persons at a given degree of hypertension. Nor did the data support the idea that women with high blood pressure are at lower risk of cardiovascular disease compared with their male counterparts.

Moreover, Framingham researchers found that an unhealthy diet, sedentary living, and weight gain increase the risk of cardiovascular disease and influence the progression and severity of cardiovascular problems. They also proved that smokers are at increased risk of myocardial infarction (heart attack) and sudden death and that those risks are related to the number of cigarettes smoked each day. Smoking cessation, on the other hand, was found to halve the risk of myocardial infarction. Other studies derived from Framingham demonstrated that even low levels of exercise can have protective effects on the heart.

Jorge Bacallao Gallestey

epidemiology, branch of medical science that studies the distribution of disease in human populations and the factors determining that distribution, chiefly by the use of statistics. Unlike other medical disciplines, epidemiology concerns itself with groups of people rather than individual patients and is frequently retrospective, or historical, in nature. It developed out of the search for causes of human disease in the 19th century, and one of its chief functions remains the identification of populations at high risk for a given disease so that the cause may be identified and preventive measures implemented.

A variety of tools, including mortality rates and incidence and prevalence rates, are used in the field of epidemiology to better understand the characteristics of disease within and across populations. In addition, epidemiologic studies may be classified as descriptive or analytic, depending on whether they are intended to characterize disease or test conclusions drawn from descriptive surveys or laboratory observations. Information from epidemiologic studies frequently is used to plan new health services and to evaluate the overall health status of a given population. In most countries of the world, public-health authorities regularly gather epidemiologic data on specific diseases and mortality rates in their populaces.

The field of epidemiology is highly interdisciplinary. In addition to its close ties to statistics, particularly biostatistics, it relies heavily on the concepts, knowledge, and theories of such disciplines as biology, pathology, and physiology in the health and biomedical sciences as well as on the disciplines of anthropology, psychology, and sociology in the behavioral and social sciences.

Historical development

Epidemiology emerged as a formal science in the 19th century. However, its historical development spanned centuries, in a process that was slow and unsteady and aided by the contributions of many individuals.

One of the first major figures in the historical development of epidemiology was the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates, who is traditionally regarded as the father of medicine. Hippocrates is presumed to have written the Epidemics and On Airs, Waters, and Places, works in which he attempted to explain the occurrence of disease on a rational rather than supernatural basis. Hippocrates recognized disease as a mass phenomenon as well as one affecting individuals.

Another significant contribution to the foundation of epidemiology was made in the 17th century, with the work of English statistician John Graunt. Graunt was the first person to analyze the bills of mortality, which recorded the weekly counts of christenings and deaths in London. In 1662 Graunt published the results of his findings in Natural and Political Observations...Made upon the Bills of Mortality. He found that although male births consistently outnumbered female births, males no longer outnumbered females by the time they reached their childbearing ages. The transition occurred because males experienced higher mortality rates than females. Graunt also constructed the first life table, a statistical table that uses death rates of a cohort (group) of persons to determine the group’s average life expectancy.

In the 18th century British naval surgeon James Lind, through his studies of scurvy, added to the foundations of epidemiology. On long naval voyages, scurvy could kill a significant proportion of a ship’s crew. To study the prevention of scurvy, Lind conducted the first modern controlled clinical trial. Selecting 12 sailors who were ill with scurvy, Lind divided them into pairs, each pair receiving a different dietary supplement. One of the pairs was given lemons and oranges to eat, and within a week the two sailors’ symptoms had disappeared. The symptoms of the sailors on the other dietary regimens, however, persisted. Lind’s findings ultimately influenced the decision by the British navy to make lemon juice (later replaced by lime juice) a compulsory part of sailors’ diets, which resulted in the eradication of scurvy from the British navy.

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Also in the 18th century surgeon Edward Jenner, who practiced medicine in the village of Berkeley in Gloucestershire, England, observed that persons who developed cowpox (a mild disease) never contracted smallpox, a severe and often disfiguring and deadly disease. Jenner decided to test his observation by using matter drawn from cowpox lesions on the hand of a dairymaid to inoculate a young boy against smallpox. When Jenner later exposed the boy to smallpox, the boy did not develop the disease. In that way Jenner performed what later became one of the most widely known vaccination trials for smallpox. In time the practice of vaccinating for the prevention of smallpox became widespread, and vaccination in general became a widely used method to prevent the occurrence of many diseases. Vaccination against smallpox was notably successful; by 1980 the disease had been declared eradicated.

Jenner’s contributions to epidemiology were followed in the 19th century by those of William Farr, a British physician who worked as a compiler of abstracts at the Registrar General’s Office (General Register Office) in London. Farr’s work helped shape England’s vital statistics system. His most-important contribution to epidemiology was the establishment of a sophisticated system for classifying the causes of death. That enabled the comparison, for the first time, of mortality rates between different demographic and occupational groups. Farr’s classification system provided the foundation for the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), a tool used to classify causes of death and injury.

A great pioneer in the field of epidemiology was English physician John Snow. Snow was well respected in London as a specialist in obstetric anesthesiology, having assisted Queen Victoria in the delivery of two of her children. Similar to other British physicians at the time, Snow became interested in the cause and spread of cholera epidemics that periodically occurred in London. In 1854, during the third epidemic to strike the city, Snow began his investigations. At the time, most physicians attributed the disease to miasma, or bad air, formed from the decay of organic matter. Snow, however, held the radical view at the time that cholera was caused by contact with germ-contaminated matter, particularly water. Snow identified a large number of deaths clustered around a public water hand pump on Broad Street in the Soho District of west London. He informed the local authorities and explained his hunch as to the cause. Although the authorities were skeptical, the next day they had the pump disabled by removing its handle. Almost immediately, new cases of cholera started to dwindle. However, because cholera deaths were already declining in the city, Snow was unable to attribute the end of the outbreak directly to the removal of the pump handle.

Snow continued his investigations, however, and in 1854 he also conducted his so-called “Grand Experiment.” Snow painstakingly documented cholera deaths among the subscribers of London’s two independent private water companies. The Southwark and Vauxhall Company drew its water from sewage-polluted inlets of the River Thames in London, whereas the Lambeth Company obtained its water from the upper portion of the river, some distance from urban pollution. Snow showed that cholera deaths were higher for residents in homes served by the Southwark and Vauxhall Company than for residents in locations served by the Lambeth Company. Because of his study methods and insight, Snow is generally regarded as the father of modern epidemiology.