JCL Roundtable: Gender differences in risk reduction with lifestyle changes

Abstract The first efforts to uncover the causes of cardiovascular disease focused on the behavioral, now called lifestyle habits of populations. Diet, exercise, and smoking were recognized as important issues with strong relationships in community-based observational studies such as the Seven Count...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical lipidology 2015-07, Vol.9 (4), p.486-495
Hauptverfasser: Brown, W. Virgil, MD, Bays, Harold E., MD, FNLA, La Forge, Ralph, MSc, CLS, FNLA, Sikand, Geeta, MA, RDN, FAND, CDE, CLS, FNLA
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container_end_page 495
container_issue 4
container_start_page 486
container_title Journal of clinical lipidology
container_volume 9
creator Brown, W. Virgil, MD
Bays, Harold E., MD, FNLA
La Forge, Ralph, MSc, CLS, FNLA
Sikand, Geeta, MA, RDN, FAND, CDE, CLS, FNLA
description Abstract The first efforts to uncover the causes of cardiovascular disease focused on the behavioral, now called lifestyle habits of populations. Diet, exercise, and smoking were recognized as important issues with strong relationships in community-based observational studies such as the Seven Countries study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Western Electric Study in Chicago. The first meaningful intervention in the United States was the dietary recommendations made by the American Heart Association in 1963 and the Surgeon General's Report on Smoking and Health in 1964. The American public listened and a very large change occurred in food consumption data and cigarette smoking over the next decade. These changes were mainly focused on men because the incidence of myocardial infarction was much higher in middle aged and older men than women. As smoking prevalence has decreased in men and increased in women and the population has aged, the differences in major vascular events have virtually disappeared. Women still enjoy a longer period of low rates but eventually the incidence rates approach those of men. As we constantly attempt to demonstrate ways of reducing risk by improved lifestyle it behooves us to re-evaluate the potential differences in gender response and adjust our expectations accordingly as clinicians.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jacl.2015.06.002
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Cardiovascular
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Diseases - epidemiology
Ethnic Groups
Exercise
Feeding Behavior
Female
Gender
Humans
Life Style
Lifestyle habits
Male
Myocardial infarction
Myocardial Infarction - epidemiology
Risk Factors
Risk reduction
Sex Characteristics
Smoking
United States
title JCL Roundtable: Gender differences in risk reduction with lifestyle changes
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