WOMEN URGENTLY NEED TO CATCH UP TO MEN IN CANADA'S BECAUSE THEY ARE SUFFERING AND DYING UNNECESSARILY FROM HEART DISEASE, ACCORDING TO A NEW REPORT.
Women urgently need to
catch up to men in Canada's health-care system because they are suffering
and dying unnecessarily from heart disease, according to a new
report.
Heart & Stroke released
a report titled "Ms. Understood" on Thursday that describes how women
are at greater risk than men of not having their disease diagnosed and treated.
Nearly 25,000 women die each year from heart disease, the report said, citing
Statistics Canada.
The reasons are
varied. Overall, women's hearts are smaller than men's. But there are other
differences, said Karin Humphries, scientific director of
the BC Centre for Improved Cardiovascular Health and one of the
report's authors.
"While both men
and women are most likely to complain of chest pain, the nature of that chest
pain can be different," Humphries said in an interview. "Women,
rather than describing it as a crushing pain might describe it as a heaviness
or a discomfort or pressure."
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Women are also more
likely to have more non-specific symptoms, such as fatigue, shortness of
breath, sweats and palpitations, cardiologists say.
The report's authors
say heart attacks are more deadly for women in part because their hearts are
affected by pregnancy, menopause and hormonal changes. For instance, nearly
one-third of young women with premature acute heart attacks have a history of
pregnancy disorders, such as gestational diabetes or hypertension that doubles
their lifetime risk for heart disease.
Physiological differences are also part of the reason, said
Dr. Paula Harvey, chief of the department of medicine and cardiology division
head at Women's College Hospital in Toronto. She was not involved in the
report.
"What's really troubling to a lot of us is in the
younger women — so women less than 60 — we're
actually seeing the rates of heart disease and death going
up," Harvey said. "And these women, in particular, if they have
a heart attack, are more likely than men to have a second heart attack or die
within 12 months of that heart attack.
Heart & Stroke said the disease in women
remains understudied, underdiagnosed and undertreated.
Nancy Bradley, 58, of Kamloops, B.C., experienced all three.
When Bradley started to feel heaviness in her chest and had trouble catching
her breath last summer, she went to the hospital, told the triage nurse she was
having a heart attack, explained her symptoms and was given Aspirin.
'I had a heart attack out in the field'
Bradley waited five hours to see a doctor, who
said he thought she was having bad heartburn. Unlike her previous
instances of heartburn, Bradley was having pain in her left arm and jaw.
Her father died at 53 from heart disease, and three siblings also had heart
issues.
"For the next two weeks, whenever it would flare
up — I would get the pain in my chest again and discomfort in my arm and
jaw — I would just eat Rolaids," Bradley recalled. "Then on
Aug. 12 at about 7:30 in the morning, I'm out walking my dog, and I
had a heart attack out in the field."
After Bradley's severe pain stabilized, she was taken to
Kelowna, B.C., to have a stent inserted to restore blood flow and
then was discharged home alone despite feeling dizzy. She never saw a
specialist for followup or received cardiac rehabilitation, a program of
exercise and dietary advice as her brother did.
Early heart attack signs are missed in about 78 per cent of
women, according to Heart & Stroke.
When a woman has a heart attack, she's less likely than a
man to have major plaques. Rather, women tend to have more diffuse disease that
involves smaller blood vessels, Harvey said. Standard diagnostic tests also
tend to be harder to interpret in women.
Some at greater risk
Some women are at greater risk. Those of South Asian,
Chinese and Afro-Caribbean descent are more vulnerable to heart disease and
have poorer outcomes compared with Caucasian Canadians, the report's authors
say. For Indigenous Canadians who live on reserves, there's a lack of
cardiac care resources in remote or rural hospitals.
More broadly, nine of 10 women have at least one risk factor
and most underestimate their risk. More women are taking up smoking, not
exercising or eating properly and there's a higher prevalence of diabetes that
increases risk of having a heart attack, Humphries said.

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