(Press-News.org) A leading cardiovascular disease researcher from Simon Fraser University is ringing the alarm on universal recommendations intended to improve heart health around the globe.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death worldwide, with 80 per cent of deaths occurring in low- and middle-income countries. However, international heart-health guidelines are primarily based on research from high-income countries and often overlook upstream causes of CVD, says Scott Lear, a health sciences professor at SFU and the Pfizer/Heart & Stroke Foundation Chair in Cardiovascular Prevention Research.
“The world extends beyond high-income countries when we think about universal recommendations like 75 minutes of exercise each week or getting five servings of fruit and vegetables every day,” says Lear, the lead author of a new review examining the impact of social, environmental, and policy factors on cardiovascular disease globally.
“There’s a stark contrast between a daily sidewalk stroll in Vancouver's West End and walking to work in New Delhi, the world’s most polluted city, where many people cannot afford to drive and public transit is lacking,” he says. “We cannot assume that life is the same everywhere. The environments in which people live and the kind of work they do makes a huge difference to their health.”
The review paper examined the causes behind the causes of CVD, using data from the ongoing collaborative Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study. This study has been collecting data from high-, middle- and low-income countries since 2002, and now includes over 212,000 participants from 28 countries across five continents.
PURE study data is collected every three years and includes a core survey, physical measurements (such as height, weight, blood pressure, waist-hip circumference, and lung capacity), and additional questionnaires targeting specific research interests, including CVD.
In addition to physical activity environments, Lear’s review study identified several other causes behind the causes of CVD worldwide, including nutrition, education, tobacco use, air pollution, climate change, social isolation and access to medication, treatment and health care.
About 87 per cent of PURE participants live in low- or middle-income countries, uniquely positioning the study to examine individual risk factors related to urbanization, says Lear. Although these review findings are based on global data, they also reflect the microcosms of different regions within a single city, or region.
Privilege shapes exercise
Lack of exercise is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, but the type and context of physical activity people do get also plays a role.
According to Lear's review, self-reported physical activity was highest in high-income countries, despite over 22 per cent of participants sitting for more than eight hours a day. By contrast, only 4.4 per cent of participants in low-income countries reported sitting for more than eight hours a day, yet their overall physical activity levels were lower.
The difference lies in the nature of the activity. In low-income countries, physical activity is often tied to work, transportation, and domestic tasks rather than leisure, explains Lear.
Priced out of produce
A healthy diet containing fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, fish and dairy can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Lear reported that regardless of country income, fruits and vegetables were more readily available and more affordable in urban areas.
But he was also surprised to find that consumption of fruits and vegetables is lower in low-income countries because farmers can’t afford to eat their own produce.
“This is a real eye opener,” says Lear. “For many of these farmers, getting the recommended minimum of five servings of fruits and vegetables a day would eat up 50 per cent of their household income.”
END
Exercise and eat your veggies: Privileged prescriptions like these don’t always reduce risk of heart disease
A leading cardiovascular disease researcher from Simon Fraser University is ringing the alarm on universal recommendations intended to improve heart health around the globe
2025-05-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
AI is here to stay, let students embrace the technology
2025-05-22
A new study from UBC Okanagan says students appear to be using generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) responsibly, and as a way to speed up tasks, not just boost their grades.
Dr. Meaghan MacNutt, who teaches professional ethics in the UBCO School of Health and Exercise Sciences (HES), recently published a study in Advances in Physiology Education. Published this month, the paper—titled Reflective writing assignments in the era of GenAI: student behaviour and attitudes suggest utility, not futility—contradicts ...
A machine learning tool for diagnosing, monitoring colorectal cancer
2025-05-22
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Scientists aiming to advance cancer diagnostics have developed a machine learning tool that is able to identify metabolism-related molecular profile differences between patients with colorectal cancer and healthy people.
The analysis of biological samples from more than 1,000 people also revealed metabolic shifts associated with changing disease severity and with genetic mutations known to increase the risk for colorectal cancer.
Though there is more analysis to come, the resulting “biomarker discovery pipeline” shows promise as a noninvasive method of diagnosing colorectal cancer and monitoring disease progression, said Jiangjiang Zhu, ...
New study reveals how competition between algae is transforming the gulf of Maine
2025-05-22
As the ocean warms across its temperate regions, kelp forests are collapsing and turf algae species are taking over. This shift from dense canopies of tall kelp to low-lying mats of turf algae is driving biodiversity loss and altering the flow of energy and nutrients through reef ecosystems.
It’s also fundamentally altering the chemical ecology of coastal ecosystems.
New research in Science, led by researchers at Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, has shown for the first time how turf algae release ...
An artificial protein that moves like something found in nature
2025-05-22
The ability to engineer shapeshifting proteins opens new avenues for medicine, agriculture, and beyond.
Proteins catalyze life by changing shape when they interact with other molecules. The result is a muscle twitching, the perception of light, or a bit of energy extracted from food.
But this crucial ability has eluded the growing field of AI-augmented protein engineering.
Now, researchers at UCSF have shown it is possible to make new proteins that move and change shape like those in nature. This ability will help scientists engineer proteins in ...
Habitat and humans shaped sloth evolution and extinction
2025-05-22
Ancient sloths ranged in size from tiny climbers to ground-dwelling giants. Now, researchers report this body size diversity was largely shaped by sloths’ habitats, and that these animals’ precipitous decline was likely a result of increasing human pressures, which also triggered the extinction of the large-bodied ground-dwelling animals. Today’s small arboreal sloths are the last remnants of a once-diverse group, surviving likely because they inhabited secluded forest canopies and avoided direct human pressures, say the authors. While only two small, tree-dwelling genera survive today – confined largely to the tropical rainforests of South ...
Turf algae chemically inhibit kelp forest recovery in warming coastal waters
2025-05-22
As kelp forests decline in the warming coastal waters of the Gulf of Maine, turf algae – dense mats of red algae replacing kelp in many regions – may chemically interfere with kelp recovery, a new study reports. This complicates efforts to restore these crucial marine ecosystems. Kelp forests are ecologically and economically vital marine ecosystems that support diverse life forms and functions. However, despite their widely recognized importance, kelp forests worldwide are threatened with collapse due to climate change and/or overfishing. In many regions where kelp forests have disappeared, they have ...
Rare binary star system formed when a neutron star orbited inside another star
2025-05-22
Astronomers have identified a rare type of binary star system containing a rapidly spinning millisecond pulsar and a helium star companion, formed via common envelope evolution. Although such systems are rare, the authors of this new study predict that others do exist; they estimate there are 16 to 84 undiscovered examples in the Milky Way. Millisecond pulsars – rapidly spinning neutron stars that emit radio waves – achieve their extraordinary rotation rates by siphoning matter from a close stellar companion. The formation of these exotic binary systems is not fully understood, because it can involve a variety of complex processes. ...
Ancient remains reveal how a pathogen began to use lice – not ticks – to infect humans
2025-05-22
Most relapsing fever bacteria that infect humans are spread by ticks, but Borrelia recurrentis is unique in being transmitted between humans via body lice. Now, new genomic evidence from ancient British remains suggests that B. recurrentis diverged from its tick-borne relatives and began adapting to transmission by lice between 6000 and 4000 years ago – coinciding with the widespread use of wool textiles by humans. The findings underscore how ancient DNA can illuminate the origins and evolution of infectious diseases and how pathogens like B. recurrentis have been shaped by human social transformations. Several pathogenic bacterial species that ...
Ancient DNA used to map evolution of fever-causing bacteria
2025-05-22
Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute and UCL have analysed ancient DNA from Borrelia recurrentis, a type of bacteria that causes relapsing fever, pinpointing when it evolved to spread through lice rather than ticks, and how it gained and lost genes in the process.
This transition may have coincided with changes in human lifestyles, like living closer together and the beginning of the wool trade.
Borrelia recurrentis bacteria cause relapsing fever, an illness with many recurring episodes of fever, which is typically found ...
New standards in nuclear physics
2025-05-22
New standards in nuclear physics
An international research team led by the Paul Scherrer Institute PSI has measured the radius of the nucleus of muonic helium-3 with unprecedented precision. The results are an important stress test for theories and future experiments in atomic physics.
1.97007 femtometre (quadrillionths of a metre): That’s how unimaginably tiny the radius of the atomic nucleus of helium-3 is. This is the result of an experiment at PSI that has now been published in the journal Science. More than 40 researchers from international institutes collaborated to develop and implement a method that ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A rule-breaking, colorful silicone that could conduct electricity
Even weak tropical cyclones raise infant mortality in poorer countries, USC-led research finds
New ketamine study promises extended relief for depression
Illinois physicists develop revolutionary measurement tool, exploiting quantum properties of light
Moffitt to present plenary and late-breaking data on blood, melanoma and brain metastases at ASCO 2025
Future risk of wildfire and smoke in the South
On-site health clinics boost attendance in rural classrooms
Ritu Banga Healthcare Disparities Research Awards support innovative science
New tools to treat retinal degenerations at advanced stages of disease
Brain drain? More like brain gain: How high-skilled emigration boosts global prosperity
City of Hope researchers to present cancer advances that could boost survival at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting
A new approach could fractionate crude oil using much less energy
From "non-essential" to life-saver: the spleen’s hidden role as a built-in bioreactor
Exercise and eat your veggies: Privileged prescriptions like these don’t always reduce risk of heart disease
AI is here to stay, let students embrace the technology
A machine learning tool for diagnosing, monitoring colorectal cancer
New study reveals how competition between algae is transforming the gulf of Maine
An artificial protein that moves like something found in nature
Habitat and humans shaped sloth evolution and extinction
Turf algae chemically inhibit kelp forest recovery in warming coastal waters
Rare binary star system formed when a neutron star orbited inside another star
Ancient remains reveal how a pathogen began to use lice – not ticks – to infect humans
Ancient DNA used to map evolution of fever-causing bacteria
New standards in nuclear physics
Why Europe’s fisheries management needs a rethink
Seven more years of funding for Konstanz Cluster of Excellence "The Politics of Inequality"
Biological markers for teen depression
Researchers show social connection is still underappreciated as a medically relevant health factor
Great success: The University of Cologne is granted five Clusters of Excellence
UNAM researchers supported to publish open access articles in over 2,400 Taylor & Francis journals
[Press-News.org] Exercise and eat your veggies: Privileged prescriptions like these don’t always reduce risk of heart diseaseA leading cardiovascular disease researcher from Simon Fraser University is ringing the alarm on universal recommendations intended to improve heart health around the globe