Young
women less likely to return to work after heart attacks
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[February 24, 2016]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - Young women are less
likely than men to have returned to work a year after a heart attack,
mostly due to social and economic factors, suggests new research.
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"When you adjust for (those factors), men and women actually return
to work at a similar rate," said Dr. Leslie Cho, who directs of the
Cleveland Clinic’s Women’s Cardiovascular Center. Cho was not
involved with the study.
The researchers write in a special issue of Circulation:
Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes focusing on women's heart health
that returning to work after a heart attack is an important
indicator of recovery.
Returning to work also has important economic and health
implications, they add. People who are unemployed are more likely to
die prematurely, have heart disease and have depression or anxiety.
For the new study, the researchers analyzed data on 1,680 heart
attack patients from the U.S., Spain and Australia. All were working
full time before their heart attack and were between ages 18 and 55
years. Fifty-seven percent were women.
Overall, 89 percent of men and 85 percent of women were back at work
a year after their heart attack.
There was no difference between men and women returning to work once
the researchers accounted for factors such as the patients' ages,
country, education and health.
"There is a lot of social demographic factors that makes (women)
disadvantaged and I think that’s why they’re returning to work
less," Cho told Reuters Health. "It’s a touchy subject, because it’s
so socially sensitive."
Factors tied an increased likelihood of returning to work included
being married, engaging in professional or clerical work and having
no prior history of cardiovascular disease.
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The researchers say their study may help find ways to increase the
number of people returning to work after a heart attack. For
example, people who work manual labor jobs may need additional
support in returning to work.
One thing that might help improve outcomes, Cho said, is adjusting
the schedule of cardiac rehabilitation programs to meet the needs of
people who work 9-to-5 jobs or have other responsibilities at home.
"This kind of paper is interesting because it creates a lot of
discussion about the social things we can do," said Cho. "Not just
putting stents in but other things that we can do."
Rachel Dreyer, the study's lead author from the Yale School of
Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, could not be reached for comment
before press time.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1HAB89r Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality
and Outcomes, online February 23, 2016.
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