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“Heart disease and stroke are worldwide health problems, and we must closely track statistics on them  to fully understand and help address the global burden they represent,” said AHA president Elliott Antman, M.D., professor of medicine and associate dean at Harvard Medical School and a senior physician in the cardiovascular division of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

“The American Heart Association continues to work with partners around the world to save and improve lives, wherever people live and work,” Antman said.

Fewer Americans have been dying of heart disease and stroke since the 1980s, and the new report found cardiovascular disease deaths in the U.S. continued to drop from 2001 to 2011, by 30.8 percent. Much of the progress comes from better use of medical therapies in patients with a history of heart disease and stroke and from lifestyle changes that are curbing the risk, the report said.

“There is a lot of good news in this report, and at the same time significant concerns remain,” Antman said. “We have made great progress in reducing deaths, yet we’re also seeing a rise in diabetes among children and childhood obesity rates remain stagnant. We must find ways to correct these troubling trends, or we risk losing ground.”

Antman noted the fight against these and other cardiovascular risk factors often starts in simple ways, regardless of what part of the world a person calls home. He points to , a website where people learn how to improve their health by following “Life’s Simple 7”: get active, control cholesterol, eat better, manage blood pressure, lose weight, reduce blood sugar and stop smoking.

In the United States, the AHA is working to improve the cardiovascular health of all Americans by 20 percent and reduce deaths from cardiovascular diseases and stroke by 20 percent by the year 2020, a goal set in 2010.

Globally, the AHA is working with the United Nations and international cardiology groups to adapt its evidence-based programs for use in other countries. The report cited estimates that 11.4 million deaths among 30- to 69-year-olds and 15.9 million deaths among people 70 and older could be delayed or prevented in 2025 if global targets are met for reducing tobacco and alcohol use, decreasing salt intake, managing obesity and lowering blood pressure and glucose levels.

This year’s report also contains a new chapter on sudden cardiac arrest. It is the first time detailed cardiac arrest statistics have been compiled within a single source.

Other highlights of the report:

  • Heart disease remains the nation’s leading cause of death in the U.S., a ranking it has held since 1921. Stroke still ranks fourth.
  • An estimated 85.6 million people in the U.S. are living with cardiovascular diseases, including heart attack, stroke, high blood pressure and chest pain.
  • Among U.S. adults, 32.6 percent—about 80 million—have high blood pressure.
  • Despite an overall 30.8 percent drop in cardiovascular disease death rates from 2001 to 2011, the high blood pressure death rate increased 13.2 percent over that same time.

Each year, the AHA works with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health and other government agencies to compile the most comprehensive and up-to-date statistics on heart disease, stroke and other vascular diseases. The update is the only source for current prevalence data on cardiovascular health.

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