By Noel Brinkerhoff and David Wallechinsky
From AllGov
Women
are less likely than men to survive a heart attack, according to recent
statistics. A study found that 42% of women who have heart attacks die
within one year compared with 24% of men.
Researchers attribute the discrepancy in heart attack survivals to a
variety of possible factors. For one, women tend to develop heart
disease about 10 years later in life than men, and they are more likely
to have coexisting chronic conditions, such as breast cancer involving
chemotherapy that may affect some women who have heart attacks. Also,
women may not be diagnosed or treated as aggressively as men for their
heart problems.
A 2004 study of 5,887 people who made 911 calls found that, on
average, women arrived at the hospital 2.3 minutes slower than men.
Another study, published in the Journal of Stroke and Cardiovascular Diseases, concluded that “female and black stroke patients are less likely than others to receive care to prevent subsequent strokes.”
Cardiovascular disease is the number one killer of women in the
United States, with about 50% of female mortalities attributed to either
heart attack or stroke.
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