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American Heart Association says there is much room for improvement in women’s heart disease awareness among black, Hispanic, young womenAmong age groups, women 25-34 years had the lowest rate of awareness at 44 percent.
The study showed barriers and motivators to engage in a heart healthy lifestyle are different for younger women, who also said their doctors were less likely to talk to them about heart disease. Researchers comparing women’s views about heart disease in 1997 and today, found:
“This is a missed opportunity,” said Lori Mosca, M.D, M.P.H., Ph.D., lead author of the study. “Habits established in younger women can have lifelong rewards. We need to speak to the new generation, and help them understand that living heart healthy is going to help them feel better, not just help them live longer. So often the message is focused on how many women are dying from heart disease, but we need to be talking about how women are going to live — and live healthier.” The American Heart Association is addressing this issue in Middle Tennessee, with such initiatives as an African-American women’s event this past weekend at Meharry, events at local churches, minority health scholarships, increased outreach to local Latinos via Hispanic media, the Go Red Por Tu Corazon movement – the Latin sister to Go Red For Women – and much more information available in Spanish and other languages. In August-October 2012, researchers conducted online and telephone surveys with more than 1,200 women, 25 and older. They compared results from surveys taken in 1997, 2000, 2003, 2006 and 2009. The survey assessed women’s lifestyle, awareness of the leading cause of death and warning signs of a heart attack, and what they would do if they experienced heart attack symptoms. Among the Women Surveyed
Mosca said efforts need to be age-appropriate and culturally sensitive to reach younger women and more minorities who are at high risk for heart disease. “There are gaps between women’s personal awareness and what they’re doing in terms of preventive steps,” said Mosca, director of preventive cardiology at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and professor of Medicine at Columbia University Medical Center. “The American Heart Association has well-established, evidence-based guidelines about heart disease prevention, so we have to better align women’s actions with what is evidence-based.” Co-authors are Michelle A. Albert, M.D., M.P.H.; Gmerice Hammond, M.D,; Jean Harvey-Berino, Ph.D.; Jean McSweeney, Ph.D., R.N.; Heidi Mochari-Greenberger, Ph;D.; M.P.H., R.D.; Jane Reckelhoff, Ph.D.; Mathew J. Reeves, Ph.D.; Amy Towfighi, M.D.; and Judy L. Bezanson, D.S.N., R.N. Author disclosures are on the manuscript. The National Institutes of Health funded the study. The American Heart Association’s Go Red For Women movement encourages women of all ages to know and reduce their risk for heart disease and provides tools to lead a heart healthy life. The campaign, now entering its 10th year, offers a variety of ways to become actively involved in helping all women make healthier choices. www.goredforwomen.org SectionsNewsTopicsAmerican Heart Association, Dallas TX, Go Red For Women, Heart Disease, Meharry Medical College, Middle Tennessee |
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