Heart Attack Deaths are Increasing in Young Women

Fatal heart attacks are increasing among young women in the US, a study has found.

The increase has reversed a trend from 1999 to 2010 of falling heart disease deaths in young women. Cancer deaths meanwhile have been consistently falling over the period 2010 to 2018. 

“Young women in the US are becoming less healthy, which is now reversing prior improvements in heart disease deaths,” said senior author Dr Erin Michos, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “With worsening epidemics of diabetes and obesity across developed countries, our findings are a warning sign that we need to pay more attention to the health of young women.”

“Women frequently put others’ health and needs before their own, often caring for children and parents and working full-time,” continued Dr Michos. “But if they have a fatal heart attack, they won’t be there for loved ones. Women must prioritise their own health, especially since heart disease is largely preventable.”

From 1999 to 2018, the respective age-adjusted mortality rates for cancer and heart disease were 52.6 and 24.0 per 100 000. Ischaemic heart disease (56%) was the most common cause of heart disease death. Respiratory tract/lung cancer (23%) was the leading cause of cancer death.

Across the 19 year study period, age-adjusted mortality rates decreased for both cancer and heart disease. However, while cancer death rates experienced a consistent decline, heart disease death rates initially fell and then increased between 2010 and 2018. This resulted in the absolute mortality gap between cancer and heart disease significantly decreasing from 32.7 to 23.0 per 100 000 per year.

The authors urged “extreme public health measures” should be taken, stressing that most heart disease was preventable, and urgent action was needed to reverse this upward trend.
“There is a misconception that women are not at risk for heart disease before the menopause, yet one-third of their cardiovascular problems occur before 65,” said Dr Michos. “Studies of young heart attack patients show that compared to men, women were less likely than to have been told they were at risk for heart disease before the attack and less often received stents and medications.”

“Most heart disease can be avoided with a healthy balanced diet, physical activity, not smoking, and maintaining healthy blood pressure, blood glucose, cholesterol level, and body weight. Just because a woman is before menopause does not mean she is not at risk. Unfortunately, the first attack can be fatal, so we need to do better with prevention,” she concluded.

Source: Medical-News.Net

Journal information: Khan, S. U., et al. (2021) A comparative analysis of premature heart disease- and cancer-related mortality in women in the USA, 1999–2018. European Heart Journal – Quality of Care and Clinical Outcomes. doi.org/10.1093/ehjqcco/qcaa099.

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