Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States and
the No. 1 killer of Black women, with an annual toll of nearly
50,000, according to the American Heart Association (AHA).
Nearly half of Black women aged over 20 have heart disease, but most
are unaware of the risks.
Johnson created Release the Pressure (RTP), a coalition to raise
awareness among Black women.
"African Americans, Black Americans are 30% more likely to die from
heart disease than non-Hispanic whites," said Johnson, American
Medical Association's vice president of communications and product
strategies.
"High blood pressure increases the risk of heart disease because the
heart is working harder," explained Dr. Peggy Roberts, founder and
chief executive of Trust Women's Healthcare.
Stroke, heart attack, aneurysm and heart arrhythmia are major risks.
Stress from racism can raise blood pressure.
"On top of all the social stressors that we have to deal with being
Black in America, it's too much," Johnson said.
Nutritionist Coach Gessie Thompson, founder of TheDetoxNow.com,
nearly died in 2020 after her blood pressure spiked from stress. She
is providing digital heart health kits and helping with RTP's goal
to send out 100,000 free validated blood pressure cuffs to Black
women by 2027.
[to top of second column] |
Home testing can be more
accurate than in a doctor's office where nerves
and other factors can skew a reading.
Despite years of headaches and multiple
miscarriages, Nichola Hamilton, 38, only knew
she had high blood pressure on her first visit
with Dr. Roberts. She got a reading of 160 over
100. Less than 120 over 80 is considered normal
but pressure above 130/80 requires focused
treatment.
"It's really important that we have the
information as a community to be able to
advocate for ourselves," said Dr. Aletha Maybank,
chief health equity officer and senior vice
president of the American Medical Association.
(The story corrects organization name in fifth
paragraph.)
(Reporting by Alicia Powell; Editing by Richard
Chang and Diane Craft)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|