To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women in the ...
Paula Montana De La Cadena, M.D., is a Cardiologist at Miami Cardiac & Vascular Institute Dr. Jayne Morgan, MD, cardiologist and the clinical director of the Covid task force at Piedmont Hospital in ...
Women remain underrepresented in heart disease trials, affecting the generalizability of findings due to sex-based differences. Barriers to female participation include logistical challenges, cultural ...
Heart health and cardiovascular diseases have become synonymous with men’s health, but Dr. Evelina Grayver, director of Northwell Health’s Women’s Heart Program, is flipping that script. “We are not ...
SAN FRANCISCO -- Dr. Laura Scrimgeour had never met a female cardiothoracic surgeon until she met Dr. Amy Fiedler. While more than 50 percent of all medical school students are women, the gender gap ...
To celebrate Women’s History Month and one day ahead of International Women’s Day, WLWT is highlighting the No. 1 killer of women: heart disease.Though many women still struggle to get the right ...
Heart disease is the number-one killer of women, with over 60 million women (44%) in the U.S. living with some form of heart disease. There is one woman dying from heart disease every minute. The ...
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women, but it’s largely preventable if a woman knows she’s at risk and starts taking action in time to avert a heart attack or stroke. The problem is ...
Cardiovascular disease has traditionally been viewed as a predominantly male health concern, but recent medical research reveals an alarming truth: heart disease poses an equally devastating threat to ...
A new AI model can flag female patients who are at higher risk of heart disease based on an electrocardiogram (ECG). A new AI model can flag female patients who are at higher risk of heart disease ...
When a heart attack strikes, speedy treatment is key. But findings in the European Heart Journal reveal that women wait longer than to seek medical attention for heart attacks-and failure to recognize ...