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Massachusetts Womens Legislative Caucus Women and Heart Disease

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Heart disease is the leading killer of women in Massachusetts and the United States. Women experience heart disease differently from men, but these differences are ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Massachusetts Womens Legislative Caucus Women and Heart Disease


1
Massachusetts Womens Legislative Caucus Women
and Heart Disease
Paula A. Johnson, MD, MPH Brigham and Womens
Hospital
2
Who We Are
  • Mary Horrigan Connors Center for Womens
    Health and Gender Biology at Brigham and Womens
    Hospital
  • Womens Health Policy and Advocacy Program
  • Center for Cardiovascular Disease in Women

3
Why heart disease?
  • Heart disease is the leading killer of women in
    Massachusetts and the United States
  • Women experience heart disease differently from
    men, but these differences are not well
    understood
  • By taking measures to prevent heart disease,
    women can protect themselves from a whole host of
    chronic illnesses

4
Women heart disease - 1936
  • Mistaken diagnoses of coronary artery disease
    in women are common because of the erroneous
    interpretation of symptoms, such as precordial
    pain with or without radiation to the left arm, a
    sense of choking, and fear of death. Such
    symptoms are common in the absence of organic
    heart disease. - Levy and
    Boas. JAMA 1936

5
Women heart disease - 2004
  • Half of all U.S. women will die of heart disease
    or stroke
  • Heart disease claims the lives of more women than
    the next seven causes of death combined
  • Significant racial and ethnic disparities exist
    among women
  • Only 13 of US women believe that heart disease
    and stroke are their greatest health threats

6
Source Massachusetts Department of Public Health
7
Differences between women men
  • More women than men die each year from heart
    attacks and the gap is growing
  • Women tend to get heart disease later in life
  • Women are, on average, ten years older than men
    at the time of their first heart attack
  • Women are much more likely to die from their
    first heart attack than men
  • Women can experience different symptoms of heart
    attack than men

8
Why are there differences?
  • Do women delay going to the hospital because they
    dont recognize their symptoms?
  • Are health care providers not recognizing womens
    symptoms or treating the symptoms less
    aggressively?
  • Do medications or treatments for heart attacks
    have different affects on women?
  • We still have more questions than answers

9
Prevention The Key to Heart Health
  • Approximately 80 of cardiovascular disease
    can be prevented by modifying preventable risk
    factors including
  • cigarette smoking
  • being overweight or obese
  • lack of physical activity
  • diabetes
  • high blood pressure
  • high cholesterol

10
Smoking
  • Tobacco is responsible for 17 of all female
    deaths in the U.S.
  • Smoking is the most preventable risk factor for
    heart attack
  • Women who smoke one to four cigarettes per day
    are at almost twice as likely to develop heart
    disease than nonsmokers
  • A woman who smokes is at risk for heart attack 19
    years earlier than one who does not smoke
  • Women of all ages who quit smoking greatly reduce
    their risk of dying prematurely

11
Women, girls tobacco
  • Tobacco companies market to women and girls by
  • creating brands and types of cigarettes
    specifically for women and girls
  • suggesting that smoking will make women girls
    feel attractive, slim less stressed
  • advancing the myth that low-tar, low-nicotine
    brands are less harmful
  • Smoking accounts for an estimated 4.4 billion
    annually in health care costs and lost
    productivity in Massachusetts

12
Overweight Obesity
  • Obesity is a widespread, disabling, and costly
    risk factor for heart disease.
  • The number of excessively heavy adults in MA
    increased 30 from 1990 to 2000
  • In MA, black and Hispanic women experience the
    highest rates of overweight and obesity
  • Women with low education and incomes have higher
    rates of overweight and obesity
  • The percentage of overweight children has doubled
    over the past 20 years. Overweight children are
    10 times more likely to be overweight as adults

13
Source CDC, National Center for Health
Statistics, Health, United States, 2002
14
Source CDC, National Center for Health
Statistics, Health, United States, 2002
15
Estimated Percent of Americans ?18 Years Who
Report No Leisure-time Activity
Physical Activity
1991 National Health Interview Survey 2000
Heart Stroke Facts AHA
16
Diabetes
Adjusted Risk of Heart Attack among Diabetic vs.
Non-Diabetic Adults
Davidson MB. Diabetes Mellitus Diagnosis and
Treatment. 4th ed. Philadelphia WB Saunders
1998.
17
High Blood Pressure
  • High blood pressure, also known as hypertension,
    greatly increases the chances of developing
    cardiovascular diseases, and it is the most
    important risk factor for stroke. Even slightly
    high levels double your risk.
  • More than half of American women will develop
    high blood pressure at some point in their lives.

18
Age Adjusted Prevalence of High Blood Pressure
among US Females Age 20 Years and Older, 1998-94
High Blood Pressure
19
Cholesterol
  • Low blood levels of "good cholesterol (high
    density lipoprotein or HDL) appears to be
    a stronger predictor of heart disease death in
    women than in men in the over 65 age group
  • High blood levels of triglycerides (another type
    of fat) may be a particularly important risk
    factor in women and the elderly

20
Stress Depression
  • Stress may be associated with an increased risk
    of heart disease in women for a number of reasons
  • Occupational factors lower-level jobs with
    greater job strain, low pay, and unequal
  • Economic factors More women live in poverty than
    men and may have fewer environmental resources
    for support
  • Depression - the most common psychological
    disorder among women has also been found to
    increase the risk of heart disease

21
Symptoms
  • Early recognition of warning symptoms is critical
    to reducing death from heart disease, since
    interventions are most effective within six hours
    after a heart attack.
  • Almost half of women having a heart attack do not
    experience typical heart disease symptoms
  • Symptoms among women include indigestion,
    unexplained weakness and fatigue, sleeplessness,
    or shortness of breath
  • Women experiencing symptoms of a heart attack are
    more likely to delay going to the hospital than
    men

22
Treatment
  • Women are less likely than men to be
  • Referred for some heart disease treatment
    procedures
  • Prescribed clot-busting therapies, aspirin and
    other medications after a heart attack
  • Referred for cardiac rehabilitation

23
Racial and Ethnic Disparities
  • Black women
  • Tend to develop heart disease at an earlier age
    and are more likely to die from heart disease
    than white women
  • Are less likely to receive appropriate preventive
    therapy and adequate risk factor control than
    white women
  • Are less likely to receive life-saving therapies
    after a heart attack than white women

24
The cost of cardiovascular disease (CVD)
  • CVD costs the U.S. 368 billion in direct and
    indirect costs in 2003
  • CVD accounts for over half of all hospital
    charges in MA
  • The estimated incremental lifetime medical cost
    of treating a woman with CVD is almost 3½ times
    greater than treating a woman without CVD

25
What can you do?- personally -
  • Reduce your risk for heart disease by keeping
    physically active, eating heart healthy foods,
    quitting smoking, and caring for your overall
    health
  • Make sure your doctor is evaluating your risk for
    heart disease with the newest female specific
    criteria developed by the American Heart
    Association

26
What can you do?- in your community -
  • Work to increase awareness that heart disease is
    the leading killer of women and that there are
    lifestyle changes women can make to reduce their
    risk
  • Create environments that contribute to our health
    safe streets and parks to walk in and reduced
    exposed to secondhand smoke

27
What can you do?- to reduce smoking -
  • Work to restore funding for smoking prevention
    and cessation initiatives in Massachusetts
  • Advocate for health insurance coverage of smoking
    cessation aides
  • Combat marketing of smoking products to women and
    girls
  • Reduce access of minors to tobacco products

28
What can you do?- to reduce overweight and
obesity -
  • Work to improve access to healthy food sources
    for low-income families
  • Increase the development and dissemination of
    culturally appropriate menus and meals
  • Promote healthy eating and physical activity in
    schools and workplaces

29
What can you do?- to improve heart care for
women -
  • Invest in research to learn more about the
    differences between men and women in relation to
    heart disease
  • Insure access to screening, diagnosis, treatment
    and rehabilitation of heart disease for uninsured
    MA residents
  • Promote adoption of the American Heart
    Associations guidelines for the prevention of
    heart disease among women

30
Discussion
  • What is currently being done?
  • Public Information Campaigns
  • Promotion of Clinical Prevention Guidelines
  • Community Initiatives
  • National and State Policy
  • Other
  • What else should be done?

31
Contact Information
  • Paula A. Johnson, MD, MPH
  • Chief, Division of Womens Health
  • Executive Director, Connors Center for Womens
    Health Gender Biology
  • Ph (617) 732-8985, Fx (617) 264-5191, Email
    pajohnson_at_partners.org
  • Rachel A. Wilson, MPH
  • Director, Womens Health Policy and Advocacy
  • Ph (617) 525-7516, Fx (617) 525-7746, Email
    rwilson1_at_partners.org
  • Rachael Fulp, MPH
  • Administrative Director, Center for
    Cardiovascular Disease in Women
  • Ph (617) 732-7076 Fx (617) 524-7746,
    Emailrfulp_at_partners.org
  • Brigham and Womens Hospital
  • 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115
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