American Heart
Association calls for focus on social factors
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[August 04, 2015] By
Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - The American Heart
Association said today that more attention needs to be paid to the
social factors that influence heart health, such as race, education, and
address.
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Those factors may be partly responsible for the increase in rates of
cardiovascular disease expected over the coming decades, according
to a statement in the journal Circulation.
"What we’re discovering is that this is a very complicated space and
there may be a number of variables beyond people's control that have
an impact on their health," said Dr. Clyde Yancy, an author of the
report.
For example, new research suggests that local pollution levels are
tied to the risk of high blood pressure, said Yancy, who is chief of
cardiology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of
Medicine in Chicago.
Cardiovascular disease should not differ based on a person's ZIP
code, Yancy said.
Every year about 735,000 Americans have heart attacks and about
800,000 have strokes, according to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Heart disease is the leading cause of death for both
men and women.
The AHA group writes that deaths from cardiovascular disease have
been on a decline since the 1970s thanks to advances in prevention
and treatment.
But not all groups have benefited equally across economic, racial
and ethnic groups, they write.
"Overall population health cannot improve if parts of the population
do not benefit from improvements in prevention and treatment," the
group writes.
The statement identifies social and economic status, race,
ethnicity, social support, culture and language, access to care and
place of residence as being determining factors of health.
Yancy told Reuters Health that the group hopes the new statement
will raise awareness about the importance of these factors, create a
dialogue that will lead to new discoveries and understanding and
lead to better education for healthcare providers.
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Beyond better health, he said, paying attention to these social
factors is important from an economic standpoint.
"Imagine what happens to our healthcare economy if we begin to
realize an increase in what is already a yearly $300 billion price
tag for cardiovascular disease," Yancy said.
He and his coauthors point out that the AHA traditionally views
cardiovascular disease risk factors as modifiable and
non-modifiable, based on physiology, lifestyle and genetics. Now,
they must consider social factors as another piece of the puzzle.
Failure to do so "will result in a growing burden of (cardiovascular
disease), especially in those with the least means to engage in the
healthcare system," the group concludes.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1MIC4Lq Circulation, online August 3, 2015.
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