Objective: To examine the benefit of a long-term community-based stroke prevention program, we explored 35 years of surveillance data of stroke incidence for residents in a rural area in Japan.
Method: The surveyed community was Ikawa town (population in 2000 was 6,116) in Akita prefecture, where a community-based stroke prevention program has been conducted since 1963. Incidence rates and numbers of stroke episodes, proportions for loss of consciousness and motor paralysis at onset, proportions for each seriousness category (A: death within one day after onset, B: death during 2-7 days after onset, C: survival more than 8 days after onset with complete hemiparesis, D: survival more than 8 days after onset with incomplete or no hemiparesis), and one-year survival rates and activity of daily living were investigated for 1964-69, 1970-79, 1980-89 and 1990-98.