(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kim Barnhardt
kim.barnhardt@cmaj.ca
613-520-7116 x2224
Canadian Medical Association Journal
Fewer than 1 in 10 Canadians in ideal cardiovascular health
CANHEART health index measures behaviours and health factors for optimal heart health
Fewer than 1 in 10 adult Canadians is in ideal cardiovascular health, according to the new CANHEART health index developed to measure heart health published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Cardiovascular disease, which includes heart disease and stroke, is the second leading cause of death in Canada.
"A large proportion of Canadians are in poor cardiovascular health, and the overall trend has not changed in the past decade," says senior author Dr. Jack Tu, from the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) and the Schulich Heart Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario. "There is an urgent need to improve the heart health of Canadians."
To understand Canadians' level of heart health, a team of researchers developed the Cardiovascular Health in Ambulatory Care Research Team (CANHEART) health index, which measures the ideal health behaviours and factors for optimal heart health. They looked at data on 464 883 people aged 12 years and older who participated in the Canadian Community Health Survey in which people answered questions about their health, health activities and use of health care services between 2003 and 2011.
Participants were categorized into two groups: adults aged 20 years and older and youth aged 12 to 19 years. Adults received scores ranging from worst (0) to best (6), whereas youth received scores between 0 and 4 (best). Ideal heart health was defined as a score of either 6 on the adult index or 4 on the youth index.
The CANHEART index looked at six ideal heart health behaviours and factors:
Smoking: nonsmoker or former smoker who quit more than a year ago in adults; never tried smoking or never smoked a whole cigarette for youth
Overweight/obesity: body mass index less than 25; age- and sex-specific cut-offs for youth
Physical activity: for adults, at least 30 minutes of walking per day; for youth, at least 1 hour of walking or 20 minutes running/jogging each day
Fruit and vegetable consumption: at least five times a day
Hypertension: no high blood pressure
Diabetes: no diabetes
The good news? Over the study period, more people were eating fruits and vegetables at least five or more times a day, there was a trend toward increasing physical activity (about 0.5% each year), and smoking decreased each year. The bad news? Increasing trends of overweight/obesity, hypertension and diabetes in adults and overweight/obesity in youth.
Women had better heart health scores than men and were three times more likely to be in ideal heart health between the ages of 40 and 49 years than men. More than one-third (37.3%) of Canadian adults were in poor cardiovascular health, and only 9.4% were in ideal cardiovascular health. For youth, about half (49.7%) were in poor cardiovascular health with only 16.6% in ideal cardiovascular health.
As people aged, heart health decreased, perhaps because of weight gain and development of hypertension and diabetes as reported in previous studies.
"Ninety per cent of Canadians have at least one heart health risk factor that could be modified by addressing behaviours that can affect cardiac risk," says Dr. Tu.
People in British Columbia scored the highest; the lowest scores, denoting the poorest cardiovascular health, were in Newfoundland and Labrador on the east coast. The trend toward poorer heart health was consistent from west to east.
Reducing Canadians' risk is more urgent than ever, because heart disease and stroke still take one life every seven minutes in Canada.
"Up to 80% of premature heart disease is preventable," says Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada President Bobbe Wood. "Unfortunately, almost 4 in 10 of us are in poor health. The good news is that by adopting healthy behaviour now, many Canadians can considerably reduce the effects of heart disease and stroke."
The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada will use the CANHEART index to track and measure progress toward its impact goal to significantly improve the health of Canadians by decreasing their risk factors for heart disease and stroke by 10% by the year 2020. This will complement the foundation's impact goal to reduce Canadians' rate of death from heart disease and stroke by 25% by 2020.
"The CANHEART health index will be a useful tool for members of the general public, clinicians, researchers, chronic disease organizations and decision-makers interested in monitoring cardiovascular health and reducing the burden of chronic noncommunicable diseases in Canada," the authors conclude.
###
The index was created by researchers at ICES, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Women's College Hospital Research Institute, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, St. Michaels' Hospital and the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario; Statistics Canada and the Ottawa Hospital Research Centre, Ottawa, Ontario.
Additional information about the CANHEART health index will be posted on the study website after publication.
Fewer than 1 in 10 Canadians in ideal cardiovascular health
CANHEART health index measures behaviours and health factors for optimal heart health
2013-12-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
1,000-year-old vineyards discovered
2013-12-27
1,000-year-old vineyards discovered
The terraced fields of Zaballa (Iruna de Oca) were used for intensive vine cultivation in the 10th century, according to archaeologists of the UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country
This news release is available in Spanish. ...
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Bruce lose its eye
2013-12-27
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Bruce lose its eye
Tropical Cyclone Bruce's eye caught the eye of NASA's Aqua satellite when it passed overhead on December 21, but two days later, Bruce's eye appeared cloud-filled on satellite imagery.
On Dec. 21, Bruce still remained ...
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Amara spinning down
2013-12-27
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Amara spinning down
Tropical Cyclone Amara ran into wind shear, and dropped from Category four hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson scale to a minimal tropical storm on December 23.
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Cyclone Amara ...
Common antibiotic may combat dry eye disease
2013-12-27
Common antibiotic may combat dry eye disease
Findings published online first in JAMA Ophthalmology
BOSTON (Dec. 23, 2013) – Meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) is the leading cause of dry eye disease, which affects tens of millions of Americans. However, there ...
Johns Hopkins review throws doubt on wound care treatment
2013-12-27
Johns Hopkins review throws doubt on wound care treatment
A systematic review of 66 research papers focused on the treatment of skin ulcers suggests that most are so technically flawed that their results are unreliable. And even of those that pass muster, there is only ...
PDL-1 antibody could help immune system fight off influenza viral infection, study suggests
2013-12-27
PDL-1 antibody could help immune system fight off influenza viral infection, study suggests
An antibody that blocks a component of a key signaling pathway in the respiratory airways could help the immune system rid the body of ...
Making sad sense of child abuse
2013-12-27
Making sad sense of child abuse
Tel Aviv University deciphers the unpredictable ways children respond to abuse
When a man in Israel was accused of sexually abusing his young daughter, it was hard for many people to believe — a neighbor reported seeing ...
Testosterone-regulated genes may affect vaccine-induced immunity
2013-12-27
Testosterone-regulated genes may affect vaccine-induced immunity
NIH-funded study helps explain differences in male and female responses to vaccines
WHAT:
A new study has identified a link between certain genes affected by ...
Walking the walk: What sharks, honeybees and humans have in common
2013-12-27
Walking the walk: What sharks, honeybees and humans have in common
A mathematical pattern of movement called a Lévy walk describes the foraging behavior of animals from sharks to honey bees, and now for the first time has been shown to describe human hunter-gatherer ...
Laser demonstration reveals bright future for space communication
2013-12-27
Laser demonstration reveals bright future for space communication
The completion of the 30-day Lunar Laser Communication Demonstration or LLCD mission has revealed that the possibility of expanding broadband capabilities in space using laser communications ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Visionary psychedelic researcher reshapes treatment landscape for psychiatric disorders
Stanford researcher decodes sugar molecules' role in brain aging protection
Italian neuroscientist links childhood trauma to lifelong brain consequences
Personality disorder pioneer reveals half-century journey transforming psychiatric classification
Why regulating stem cell–based embryo model research is important (yet controversial)
An Alaskan volcano could help scientists understand why ‘stealthy’ volcanoes erupt without warning
Drive an electric motor without metal! KIST develops CNT-based ultra-lightweight coil technology
Cracking the spatial code: A new chapter in bone and muscle research
New oil and gas fields incompatible with Paris climate goals
Smartphone tests could accelerate drug development for Huntington’s disease
Significant gaps in testing for genetic cancer risk, study finds
Payment source shift for surgical care among veterans enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans
Study reveals how fatal school shootings disrupt local economies
American Psychological Association 2025 Convention, Aug. 7-9, Denver
Appendix cancer incidence has quadrupled in older millennials
Even bumble bee queens need personal days, too
Carbon capture method mines cement ingredients from the air
Fostering Integration: SELINA’s 5th project Workshop on the Azores unites partners to strengthen collaboration
Reelin marks cocaine-activated brain neurons and regulates cocaine reward
Creatine is safe, effective and important for everyone, longtime researcher says
Robots made of linked particle chains
Research alert: laying the groundwork for potential age-related macular degeneration therapies
It’s not the game, it’s the group: Sports fans connect the most over rituals
AI identifies key gene sets that cause complex diseases
Virginia Tech study sheds light on solar farm impacts to property values
Study defines key driver of aggressive ovarian cancer
Rings of time: unearthing climate secrets from ancient trees
Medical AI systems failing to disclose inaccurate race, ethnicity information
Light and AI drive precise motion in soft robotic arm developed at Rice
Vital connections between journalists and whistleblowers under increasing pressure
[Press-News.org] Fewer than 1 in 10 Canadians in ideal cardiovascular healthCANHEART health index measures behaviours and health factors for optimal heart health