This resolution identifies women's cardiovascular health as an important health care issue and supports gender-specific cardiovascular health research, prevention, and treatment.
[Congressional Bills 117th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 88 Introduced in House (IH)]
<DOC>
117th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 88
Recognizing women's cardiovascular health as a critical health care
priority that affects every State and contributes to increased health
care costs, and promoting the necessity of increased awareness of and
education on the symptoms for heart disease among women, gender-
specific cardiovascular disease research, and policy action to
alleviate the risks of heart disease among women.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
February 2, 2021
Ms. Herrera Beutler (for herself, Ms. Roybal-Allard, Mr. Taylor, Mr.
Fitzpatrick, Mr. Young, Mr. Bost, Mr. Posey, Ms. Norton, Mrs. Axne, Ms.
Jackson Lee, Ms. Scanlon, and Ms. Adams) submitted the following
resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Recognizing women's cardiovascular health as a critical health care
priority that affects every State and contributes to increased health
care costs, and promoting the necessity of increased awareness of and
education on the symptoms for heart disease among women, gender-
specific cardiovascular disease research, and policy action to
alleviate the risks of heart disease among women.
Whereas heart disease is the number one killer of women in the United States;
Whereas heart disease accounts for the deaths of 400,000 women each year or
1,080 each day;
Whereas one in five women die of heart disease or stroke;
Whereas the symptoms of heart disease and heart attack among women are different
from those among men;
Whereas the maternal mortality rate in the United States is rising with more
than 700 women dying from pregnancy-related conditions each year, and
cardiac disease and stroke, the leading cause of pregnancy-related
deaths in the United States, is responsible for approximately 34 percent
of these losses;
Whereas unrecognized symptoms and inadequate treatment of cardiovascular disease
among women contribute to the increasing costs to the United States
health care system, which, if left unaddressed, are projected to surpass
$1 trillion by 2035;
Whereas heart attack symptoms among women are not typically recognized and can
be as subtle as fatigue, jaw pain, shortness of breath, backache, and
indigestion;
Whereas half of all women experiencing heart attacks display none of the
typically recognized male symptoms;
Whereas 64 percent of women who die of coronary heart disease show no prior
typically recognized symptoms;
Whereas women are 50 percent more likely to receive an incorrect diagnosis
following a heart attack;
Whereas despite gender differences in physiology and the manifestation of
cardiovascular disease, women comprise only 36 percent of participants
in cardiovascular disease studies that enroll both men and women; and
Whereas even when considering all cardiovascular disease-related studies,
including single-sex studies, women still comprise only 38 percent of
participants: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) recognizes the vital importance of decreasing
cardiovascular disease among women;
(2) promotes the necessity of raising awareness of the
preventable ubiquity of cardiovascular mortality among women,
and urges a comprehensive public awareness initiative that
establishes best practices for identifying and treating
cardiovascular incidents in women, specifically;
(3) supports efforts to educate women, men, patients, and
physicians about the critical differences of cardiovascular
disease symptoms between women and men;
(4) supports the promotion of gender-specific
cardiovascular health research, prevention, and treatment,
because--
(A) there is a material difference in the way women
present with cardiovascular or heart attack symptoms;
and
(B) gender-specific cardiovascular research is
essential to driving successful positive outcomes in
the reduction of mortality rates;
(5) affirms the connection between cardiovascular disease
and preeclampsia in new mothers;
(6) acknowledges that the costs to the health care system
of unrecognized symptoms in the treatment of women can be
substantially reduced with appropriate public policy; and
(7) supports the development of economic impact data to
ascertain the health care system costs to be saved by
decreasing the incidents of death due to unrecognized symptoms
of heart attack in women.
<all>
Introduced in House
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Referred to the Subcommittee on Health.
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