Jaffer Shahin, Foulds Heather J A, Parry Monica, Gonsalves Christine A, Pacheco Christine, Clavel Marie-Annick, Mullen Kerri A, Yip Cindy Y Y, Mulvagh Sharon L, Norris Colleen M
Department of Medicine/Community Internal Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
College of Kinesiology, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
CJC Open. 2020 Oct 15;3(1):1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.cjco.2020.10.009. eCollection 2021 Jan.
This Atlas chapter summarizes the epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in women in Canada, discusses sex and gender disparities, and examines the intersectionality between sex and other factors that play a prominent role in CVD outcomes in women, including gender, indigenous identity, ethnic variation, disability, and socioeconomic status.
CVD is the leading cause of premature death in Canadian women. Coronary artery disease, including myocardial infarction, and followed by stroke, accounts for the majority of CVD-related deaths in Canadian women. The majority of emergency department visits and hospitalizations by women are due to coronary artery disease, heart failure, and stroke. The effect of traditional cardiovascular risk factors and their association with increasing cardiovascular morbidity is unique in this group.
Indigenous women in Canada experience increased CVD, linked to colonization and subsequent social, economic, and political challenges. Women from particular racial and ethnic backgrounds (ie, South Asian, Afro-Caribbean, Hispanic, and Chinese North American women) have greater CVD risk factors, and CVD risk in East Asian women increases with duration of stay in Canada.
Canadians living in northern, rural, remote, and on-reserve residences experience greater CVD morbidity, mortality, and risk factors. An increase in CVD risk among Canadian women has been linked with a background of lower socioeconomic status, and women with disabilities have an increased risk of adverse cardiac events.
本图谱章节总结了加拿大女性心血管疾病(CVD)的流行病学情况,讨论了性别差异,并探讨了性别与其他在女性CVD结局中起重要作用的因素之间的交叉性,这些因素包括性别、原住民身份、种族差异、残疾和社会经济地位。
CVD是加拿大女性过早死亡的主要原因。冠状动脉疾病,包括心肌梗死,其次是中风,占加拿大女性CVD相关死亡的大部分。女性大多数急诊就诊和住院是由于冠状动脉疾病、心力衰竭和中风。传统心血管危险因素的影响及其与心血管发病率增加的关联在该群体中是独特的。
加拿大原住民女性的CVD发病率增加,这与殖民化以及随后的社会、经济和政治挑战有关。来自特定种族和族裔背景的女性(即南亚、非洲加勒比、西班牙裔和北美华裔女性)有更大的CVD危险因素,东亚女性的CVD风险随着在加拿大居住时间的延长而增加。
居住在加拿大北部、农村、偏远地区和保留地的居民CVD发病率、死亡率和危险因素更高。加拿大女性CVD风险增加与社会经济地位较低的背景有关,残疾女性发生不良心脏事件的风险增加。