June 29, 2022

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Only 1 in 5 people in the US has optimal heart health

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

About 80% of people in the U.S. have low to moderate cardiovascular health based on the American Heart Association's new Life's Essential 8 checklist according to a new study published today in Circulation journal. Life's Essential 8, also published today in Circulation, details the Association's updated guidance to measure cardiovascular health, adding healthy sleep as essential for ideal heart and brain health.

The Life's Essential 8 metrics are incorporated into the Association's My Life Check tool to determine a score based on eight essential components for ideal heart and : diet, , nicotine exposure, sleep duration, body mass index, blood lipids, blood glucose and blood pressure. It is an updated algorithm from the scientifically proven Life's Simple 7, which did not include sleep heath. Life's Essential 8 also updated some of the previous version's metrics to be more sensitive to differences among groups of people. In adults, overall cardiovascular health is calculated for each individual by summing the scores for each of the 8 metrics together and dividing the total by 8, to provide a Life's Essential 8 score ranging from 0-100. Thus, the highest or healthiest cardiovascular health score possible is 100. Overall scores below 50 indicate "low" cardiovascular health, 50-79 is considered "moderate" and scores of 80 and above indicate "high" cardiovascular health.

According to this first study using Life's Essential 8 as the measure for cardiovascular health, among more than 23,400 U.S. adults and children free of , the overall cardiovascular health of the U.S. population is well below ideal, with 80% of adults scoring at a low or moderate level. Researchers evaluated from the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination surveys in 2013-2018 that included more than 13,500 adults (ages 20-79 years) and nearly 9,900 children (ages 2 to 19 years).

The analysis found:

"These data represent the first look at the cardiovascular health of the U.S. population using the AHA's new Life's Essential 8 scoring algorithm," said Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, M.D., Sc.M., FAHA, who led the study and is president of the American Heart Association, and chair of the department of preventive medicine at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. "Overall, the cardiovascular health of the U.S. population is suboptimal, and we see important differences across age and sociodemographic groups. Analyses like this can help , communities, clinicians and the public to understand the opportunities to intervene to improve and maintain optimal cardiovascular health across the ." Lloyd-Jones is also the Eileen M. Foell Professor of Heart Research and professor of preventive medicine, medicine and pediatrics at Northwestern.

More information: Status of Cardiovascular Health in US Adults and Children Using the American Heart Association's New "Life's Essential 8" Metrics: Prevalence Estimates from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), 2013-2018, Circulation (2022). DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.060911

Journal information: Circulation

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