Taking Care Of Our Hearts

Share Button

heartFrom Your Health Journal…..”February is Heart Month, so we will be focusing a lot on keeping a healthy heart. A great article in the Huffington Post written by Kathleen Sebelius, The Secretary of Health and Human Services – the article is called More than Valentine’s Day: Taking Care of Our Hearts. With heart disease still the number one killer in the United States, and many kids suffering from risk factors for heart disease, change is needed to keep ourselves healthy and strong. Each year, heart disease takes the lives of more than half a million Americans. The good news is that most of the risk factors for heart disease–including obesity, physical inactivity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and smoking–are preventable and controllable. Please take the time to visit the Huffington Post web site (link provided below) to read this important article by Secretary Sebelius. It is important to understand, and to inspire you to keep your heart healthy.”

From the article…..

February is American Heart Month, which makes this a good time to talk about the ways the Affordable Care Act helps us take better care of our hearts.

Right now, heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. Every year, it takes the lives of more than half a million Americans: these are our grandparents, our parents, our siblings, our friends, and our neighbors. Although many people think of heart disease as
a man’s problem, women can and do get heart disease.

This epidemic kills more women than diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, and lung cancer combined. In the United States, a woman suffers a heart attack every 90 seconds.

The good news is that most of the risk factors for heart disease–including obesity, physical inactivity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and smoking–are preventable and controllable.

Now, because of the health care law, millions of Americans with private plans can get life-saving preventive services like high blood pressure screening and help to quit smoking, without paying a penny out-of-pocket.

And seniors and people with disabilities who have Medicare can now get recommended preventive services like obesity counseling and cholesterol screening free of charge.

The law also invests in programs like the Million Hearts initiative, which aims to prevent 1 million heart attacks and strokes over five years. And it invests in the Prevention and Public Health Fund, which helps fight the causes of chronic illnesses like heart disease by, among other things, controlling the obesity epidemic, tackling health disparities, and reducing tobacco use.

Combined with these efforts, having the security of quality, affordable health insurance is also vital in the fight against heart disease. In less than a year, it will be illegal for insurance companies to deny any American coverage because of a pre-existing condition, like heart disease.

To read the complete article…..Click here