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Investment, action urged to improve access, quality and equity in women's heart health

Advisory Highlights:

  • Women continue to be underrepresented in research for cardiovascular disease (CVD), leading to gaps in knowledge and understanding of how CVD impacts women.

  • Some risk factors for heart disease are specific to women, such as risks related to menopause and treatments for breast cancer, and some, such as depression, carry a different risk for cardiovascular disease events in women than in men.

  • Understanding the genetic, cellular and physiologic factors affecting womens heart health is necessary to achieve health equity. Comparing health data from women to data from men may lead to conclusions that mens health is the gold standard and womens health is atypical. This overlooks the unique biology and life stages of women that impact their health.

Embargoed until 4 a.m. CT/5 a.m. ET Monday, May 9, 2022

(NewMediaWire) - May 09, 2022 - DALLAS - Investing in and improving research, awareness and equity in womens heart health are critical for the health and well-being of women, according to a new Presidential Advisory from the American Heart Association, published today in the Associations flagship journalCirculation. The advisory is a call to action to identify and remove barriers to health care access, quality and equity for women.

We are losing ground on key indicators of cardiovascular health among women, including blood pressure control, weight management and diabetes, says Vronique L. Roger, M.D., M.P.H., FAHA, the advisory committees corresponding author and a senior investigator at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, a division of the National Institutes of Health.

The advisory also highlights the need for a cultural shift in how cardiovascular health data are presented to achieve health equity for women. Comparing data from women with data from men inherently positions data from men as the gold standard, said Roger. For example, the belief that women having a heart attack will present more often with atypical symptoms carries an undertone that women present in the wrong way. The advisory further suggests that data specific to women that does not label womens symptoms as atypical may lead to improved diagnostic or therapeutic choices, helping to increase equitable care.

The advisory outlines an actionable roadmap, divided into four key areas that require attention and investment to better address womens heart health: 1) epidemiology and prevention; 2) awareness; 3) access and delivery of equitable health care; and 4) involvement of health care professionals, researchers and communities.

We must urgently address the pervasive gaps in knowledge and health care delivery to reduce gender-based disparities and achieve equity. There is no improving cardiovascular health without achieving health equity, adds co-author of the presidential advisory Nanette K. Wenger, M.D., FAHA, an emeritus professor of medicine in the division of cardiology at Emory University School of Medicine, consultant to the Emory Heart and Vascular Center, founding consultant to the Emory Womens Heart Center and director of the Cardiac Clinics and Ambulatory Electrocardiographic Laboratory at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta.

Epidemiology and Prevention
According to the January 2022 Heart Disease and Stroke Statistical Update, heart disease is the leading cause of death for men and women in the United States, and nearly half (44.4%) of adult women ages 20 years and older between 2015 and 2018 had some form of cardiovascular disease including high blood pressure.

The advisory emphasizes that some risk factors for heart disease are specific to women or carry a different risk for CVD events in women than in men. These factors include: