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Raising Awareness About Our #1 Killer
National Women's Heart Week February 1-7 is an outreach program
that combines fun, free activities with heart
health screenings. By partnering with local organizations, we can help
women come together and encourage fitness, promote stress
reduction activities and learn about heart-healthy eating and gender-specifics
on women's heart disease.
The 7 focus days of Women's Heart Week promote
prevention, education, symptoms awareness and early intervention.
An Important Message for Women:
Heart Disease is the number one killer of American women. Recognizing symptoms
and risks, making lifestyle changes and getting timely care
can save a woman's life. Women's Heart Week is a national outreach
campaign aimed at improving women's outcomes from this deadly
disease. Heart disease is America’s leading killer of
women over the age of 34. Most women are not aware of this
fact and fail to recognize their own risk factors for
heart disease. Women’s symptoms, especially those
that are milder, often go ignored. Women often miss out
on critical opportunites to save their own lives.
Women's Heart Foundation (WHF) recognizes that women are busier than ever as they
juggle career, family and care-giving responsibilities.
For many, each day resembles a jig–saw puzzle in which
a woman is required to piece together her time and obligations.
Now, more than ever, women need to take time out for
themselves and be given a reminder: Take Care of Your Heart.
To Healthcare Providers:
WHF is always looking for
new health partners to implement its programs
and is proud to welcome Curves® for Women, Slim & Tone, Slender
Lady, Shapes USA and other women's fitness clubs as new
participants for this outreach. WHF provides collateral materials
with bookmarks, promotional gifts and a woman's health tracker
card. WHF also provides a sample heart risk screening tool
for free download. This screening tool with procedure for follow-up has been piloted
by a leading healthcare institution. Although the tool is copyrighted,
WHF conveys free use of the material, so long as
acknowledgement is provide the author: The Women's Heart Foundation.
This tool may be modified and revised in accordance with your individual
institution's guidelines and WHF accepts no responsibity for
the reliability of the screening tool.
Your target audience is women of all ages seeking better
heart health care for themselves and their families. Let us hear
from you by January 1 so we can post your event on our website. And
please send us a report about the outcome of your event(s).
Focus Days
The WHF urges hospitals across the country to open
their doors to women during National Women's Heart Week to offer free heart
screenings and healthy lifestyle counseling, starting
February 1 - National Women's Heart Wellness Day, and to
combine these screenings with other heart health activities
for the entire family so that a woman will be able to participate
without feeling conflicted about the amount of time spent
away from home.
Follow the 7 Focus Days of
Women's Heart Week as a guide for holding a successful
outreach event with vendors and activities all coming
together for promotion of women's heart health.
The Focus Day topics represent a holisitic
approach to women's heart wellness and awareness and include
Feb 1: Risk and Symptoms Awareness
Feb 2: Exercise and Fitness
Feb 3: Nutrition and Supplements
Feb 4: Holistic Health and Stress Management
Feb 5: Medication Safety
Feb 6: Health Care Self-Management
Feb 7: Positive Self-Image
Sixteen hospital partners in New Jersey implemented
some form of the Women's Heart Week program
in 2004, and this number continues to grow. In 2005,
WHF partnered with the St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center
and the Willowbrook Mall in Wayne, NJ for a Saturday program
exposing 40,000 shoppers to a critical
health message with 360 women receiving heart risk
screenings by hospital nursing personnel.
Statistics on Overweight Adults and Children and Reported Activity Levels
Less than one-third (31.8 percent) of U.S. adults get regular
leisure-time physical activity (defined as light or moderate
activity five times or more per week for 30 minutes or more
each time and/or vigorous activity three times or more per week
for 20 minutes or more each time). About 10 percent of adults
do no physical activity at all in their leisure time.[1]
Nearly two-thirds of U.S. adults are overweight (BMI > 25, which includes those who are obese).[7]
All adults (20+ years old): 129.6 million (64.5 percent)
Women (20+ years old): 64.5 million (61.9 percent)
Men (20+ years old): 65.1 million (67.2 percent)
Nearly one-third of U.S. adults are obese (BMI > 30).
All adults (20+ years old): 61.3 million (30.5 percent)
Women (20+ years old): 34.7 million (33.4 percent)
Men (20+ years old): 26.6 million (27.5 percent)[2]
About 25 percent of young people (ages 12–21 years) participate
in light to moderate activity (e.g., walking, bicycling)
nearly every day. About 50 percent regularly engage in
vigorous physical activity. Approximately 25 percent report
no vigorous physical activity, and 14 percent report no recent
vigorous or light to moderate physical activity.[3]
Interestingly, according to disease reports from the New York Department of Health
and the 2004 Women's Heart Day program in Manhattan, while diabetes rates are soaring around the country,
the incidence of diabetes in lower Manhattan is going down. Why?
The average New Yorker walks four miles a day!
Launching the 10,000 Steps Campaign
The Women's Heart Foundation is using Women's Heart Week
to promote a nationwide launch
of a 10,000 Steps walking program on February 1 - National Women's Heart
Wellness Day, by asking each Governor to participate
with a proclamation and call to action
for all citizens to walk to reduce the risk of heart disease,
diabetes and obesity. It is recommended that all healthy adults
walk 10,000 steps every day -- the equivalent of about four miles.
This amount of exercise has been shown to optimize health
and can prevent many diseases.
The 10,000 Steps program is also called "The President's Challenge" and
is supported by a website:
www.presidentschallenge.org where the entire program
is outlined including incentive prizes for
adults and children sticking with the program for
six consecutive weeks. This program is conducive to
occupational health settings. The health and fitness leaders
can post a board with enrollees and organize the incentive
prizes through the President's Challenge website.
Just a little positive feedback works wonders.
Women's Fitness Gyms are great places to host an Aerobic
10,000 Steps program which can be used as enhancement to
the regular workout. Community leaders can get area high schools
involved, through Physical Education teachers, by charging
students with conducting "Walkability" surveys,
then working collaboratively to submit results of the surveys to
local planning board officials. Follow guidelines from the
Girl Scouts USA "Active Living By Design" program to begin thinking
about ways to create destination points in the community
to make exercise safer and more fun.
It is important that each community assign
a "walk monitor" in charge
of collecting walk tracking information.
Each person would be asked to track the number of steps
daily and bring a copy of her daily recorded steps to
the walk monitor once the person reaches
a total of 50,000 steps, then 150,000 steps, then finally 300,000
steps for receipt of a reward.
If weight loss is the goal, it is recommended to walk
12,000 to 15,000 steps a day and keep a daily log
for recording dietary intake as well. Keeping a dietary intake log is a great way to
reduce caloric intake.
WHF is partering with
communities of faith to carry its critical health message to the forefront
with a Women's Heart Day being planned the first Saturday in February
at the Trenton War Memorial in New Jersey from 1-5 PM. There will
be food demos, music, dance and special guests. The first 50 registrants
of the 10,000 Steps program will receive a free pedometer to count their steps.
WHF is working with a local high school to offer rewards
to participants who stick to the 10,000 Steps program for 12 consecutive
weeks with prizes to be distributed at its annual Run for Your Heart
event held Mother's Day weekend (you must
be present to win and bring your completed walk log -- meeting
the required number of steps walked. No prizes will be mailed).
Walker's log must be presented to the Race Marshall by 9:00 A.M. the morning
of the event in order to qualify.
Awards are based on the honor system of reporting steps. Record your
steps using the Walker's Log form. Mother-daughter teams who walk the
most steps will recieve further awards.
Visit www.walking.about.com. This site
also offers great support to walkers that includes:
- a weekly newsletter
- tracking of steps and nutritional information
- walking support
- diet and nutrition tips and tools
- recipe of the day
- focus questions
- word of the day
- goal-setting
- fun activities to help keep you focused
- the opportunity to share through forum or chat.
So take it one step at a time. It takes time to build new
healthy habits. Follow along each day to walk, exercise, eat
right, set and achieve goals - and have some fun along the way.
There are many activity-based programs outlined herein with
support documents, downloads and website links.
All represent a CALL TO ACTION to be more active to prevent
early death from heart disease. It's time for families to
get involved. Take action.
Each 10,000 Steps participant is expected to check with
her health care practitioner before starting
a new exercise program, then, accept the President's Challenge
to become a healthier American. Get your family moving. Be fit.
Take Care of Your Heart©.
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