Sex/gender differences in cardiovascular disease prevention: what a difference a decade makes

Lori Mosca, Elizabeth Barrett-Connor, Nanette Kass Wenger, Lori Mosca, Elizabeth Barrett-Connor, Nanette Kass Wenger

Abstract

Over the past decade, scientists, healthcare providers, the public, and policy makers have made substantial efforts to improve understanding of the sex/gender differences in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and to recognize the importance of heart disease in women. Federal and American Heart Association (AHA) initiatives to raise awareness and to reduce gender disparities in research and clinical care are listed in Table 1. There was a near doubling of the rate of awareness of heart disease as the leading cause of death in women between 1997, when the AHA launched its first campaign for women, and 2009; during that same period, the death rate resulting from CVD decreased by nearly half.– The extent to which efforts to close research gaps and to heighten awareness of heart disease in women are causally linked to lower CVD mortality or have resulted in improved clinical outcomes for women is not established. The purposes of this article are to evaluate contemporary sex/gender differences in the burden of CVD, to assess the impact of recent clinical trials on recommendations for the prevention of CVD in women, and to examine factors that may facilitate or impede quality CVD preventive care in women. Recommendations for the design and analyses of future CVD clinical trials in women are also provided.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Annual number of adults having diagnosed heart attack or fatal coronary heart disease (CHD) by age and sex. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. Copyright © 2011, American Heart Association, Inc.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Trends in the total annual number of deaths caused by cardiovascular disease according to gender, United States, 1979 to 2007. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. Copyright © 2011, American Heart Association, Inc.

Source: PubMed

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