Winter months are heart attack months.
Men and women have about the same adjusted in-hospital death rate for heart attack — but women are more likely to die if hospitalized for a more severe type of heart attack.
According to a report in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association:
1.Women are twice as likely as men to die if hospitalized for a type of heart attack known as ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).
2. Women are also less likely to receive appropriate and timely treatment for heart attack.
3. Women with STEMI have a 12 percent higher relative risk for in-hospital death compared to men.
4. Compared to men, women are 14 percent less likely to receive early aspirin; 10 percent less likely to receive beta blockers; 25 percent less likely to receive reperfusion therapy (to restore blood flow); 22 percent less likely to receive reperfusion therapy within 30 minutes of hospital arrival; and 13 percent less likely to receive angioplasty within 90 minutes of hospital arrival.
Women admitted with a STEMI are about twice as likely to die in the first 24 hours of hospitalization as men.
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