DHDSP Funded Programs Maps

CDC’s Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention (DHDSP) provides public health leadership, funding, and technical assistance for life-saving efforts to prevent heart disease and stroke. These maps show DHDSP’s fiscal year 2019 investments in heart disease and stroke prevention. Learn more about DHDSP’s investments pdf icon[PDF – 288 KB].

DHDSP Programs and Chronic Disease Initiatives

CDC supports several public health efforts that address heart disease and stroke. The map below illustrates the range of DHDSP’s funded programs and chronic disease initiatives. View a table with more information about investments to state, local, and tribal grantees.

This map of the continental United States, Alaska, and Hawaii shows the range of Division of Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Programs for fiscal year 2019. In FY 2019, DHDSP funded statewide initiatives in all 50 states and the District of Columbia to prevent, manage, and reduce risk factors associated with heart disease and stroke.

WISEWOMAN Locations

The map below represents locations funded by the WISEWOMAN program. Learn more about the WISEWOMAN program.

A map of the United States depicting states and tribal organizations that received fiscal year 2019 funding from the Well-Integrated Screening and Evaluation for Women Across the Nation (WISEWOMAN) program. Twenty-one states received WISEWOMAN core funding, including Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington State, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Six states and one tribal organization received WISEWOMAN innovation funding, including Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, and the Southcentral Foundation in Alaska. Three tribal organizations received WISEWOMAN Tribal Organization Core Funding, including the Southcentral Foundation and Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium in Alaska and the Native American Rehabilitation Association in Oregon.