Arq. Bras. Cardiol. 2019; 112(6): 713-714

Brazilian Society of Cardiology – The Women’s Letter

Glaucia Maria Moraes de Oliveira ORCID logo , Fátima Elizabeth Fonseca de Oliveira Negri, Nadine Oliveira Clausell, Maria da Consolação V. Moreira, Olga Ferreira de Souza, Ariane Vieira Scarlatelli Macedo, Barbara Campos Abreu Marino, Carisi Anne Polanczyk, Carla Janice Baister Lantieri, Celi Marques-Santos, Cláudia Maria Vilas Freire, Deborah Christina Nercolini, Fatima Cristina Monteiro Pedroti, Imara Correia de Queiroz Barbosa, Magaly Arrais dos Santos ORCID logo , Maria Cristiane Valeria Braga Braile, Maria Sanali Moura de Oliveira Paiva, Marianna Deway Andrade Dracoulakis, Narriane Chaves Holanda, Patricia Toscano Rocha Rolim, Roberta Tavares Barreto Teixeira, Sandra Mattos, Sheyla Cristina Tonheiro Ferro da Silva, Simone Cristina Soares Brandão, Viviana de Mello Guzzo Lemke ORCID logo , Marcelo Antônio Cartaxo Queiroga Lopes

DOI: 10.5935/abc.20190111

Objective

The primary objective of this document is to stimulate improvements in women’s health conditions in Brazil, with a focus on cardiovascular disease (CVD), which is responsible for 17.5 million premature deaths yearly worldwide. This number is predicted to increase to 23 million by 2030. CVD are responsible for one third of all deaths in Brazil, with similarities between men and postmenopausal women. These data assume even greater importance when we consider that 80% of premature deaths could have been avoided by controlling four risk factors: tobacco use, inappropriate diet, physical inactivity, and harmful alcohol use.

This document further aims to create a permanent discussion group that will play a leadership role in Brazilian healthcare policies, providing administrators with an overall view of the relevance of CVD to women so that they may establish strategic actions to reduce the prevalence of risk factors and improve diagnosis and therapeutic approach, thus reducing mortality and morbidity.

[…]

Brazilian Society of Cardiology – The Women’s Letter

Comments

Skip to content