(Circulation. 2005;111:383-384.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Editorial |
From the Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Mass (A.K.J.), and the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver (R.H.E.).
Correspondence to Dr Alice K. Jacobs, Department of Cardiology, Boston Medical Center, 88 E Newton St, Boston, MA 02118. E-mail alice.jacobs@bmc.org
Key Words: Editorials coronary disease prevention women
An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract. |
| Introduction |
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Many women lack the basic awareness that cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among women. The American Heart Associations (AHA) 2004 survey of womens attitudes and knowledge showed that, when asked what they thought was the leading cause of death among women, >50% of women answered this question incorrectly.3 Even more important, only 13% of women personalized this information and answered that their own personal greatest health threat was heart disease. Although this level has increased from 7% since the initial survey 6 years ago, it is still far too low. Furthermore, because coronary disease becomes clinically evident in women about a decade later than it does in men, women commonly believe that preventing heart disease can be postponed. They may believe that they can begin to focus on it in their 50s, after other priorities such as childbearing, child rearing, and caring for their families no longer need their full attention. They miss the fact so well demonstrated by the Pathobiological Determinants of Atherosclerosis in Youth studies that atherosclerosis is often evident in women in their 20s, that it is related to classical cardiovascular risk factors, and that preventing it must start in childhood.4,5 Publication of the AHA survey mentioned
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