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Social Factors Important While Addressing Cardiovascular Health: American Heart Association

by Lakshmi Darshini on August 5, 2015 at 7:00 PM

There is a decline in the number of deaths from heart attacks, strokes and other heart diseases, but this trend can be reversed by social factors including race, income, environment and education, according to a scientific statement from the American Heart Association (AHA).


The decline in cardiovascular deaths are attributed to the advances in prevention and treatment, but these benefits have not been shared equally across economic, racial, and ethnic groups in the United States, according to the statement, published in the association's journal Circulation.

"The steady decline of death from cardiovascular disease that began in the 1970s might be coming to an end. Overall population health cannot improve if parts of the population do not benefit from improvements in prevention and treatment," said Edward P. Havranek, chair of the writing group and a cardiologist at Denver Health Medical Center.

Circumstances in which people are born, grow, live, work and age come under social determinants. Several areas in which clear associations between societal factors and cardiovascular health have been shown in the statement. Among those:

There is an expected increase of 10% in the number of cardiovascular disease cases in the United States between 2010 and 2030. According to the statement the social dynamic of cardiovascular disease is helping to drive the increase. Addressing the social influences, as well as biological and genetic influences, on cardiovascular health in America is necessary to achieve what the American Heart Association calls the inclusive "culture of health."

"Failure to address the social dynamic of cardiovascular disease will compromise the American Heart Association's 2020 Impact Goal to improve cardiovascular health of all Americans by 20 percent while reducing deaths from cardiovascular diseases and stroke by 20 percent," Havranek said.

Also the statement suggests that doctors and consumers pay attention to how social factors might impact cardiovascular health and recommends specific steps for improving social factors that could negatively impact cardiovascular health. These include a focus on a new kind of advocacy.

"We're used to public health programs that educate people to know their blood pressure or cholesterol numbers. We're less comfortable with public health programs focused on getting three-year-olds into daycare programs, which may improve their health down the road. We might be less accustomed to (but need) public health programs that look at how urban planners can improve neighborhoods that are seeing higher rates of cardiovascular disease," he said.

Source: Medindia

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