In January, a new study in the Journal of the American Heart Association found women and Black men are far less likely to receive potentially lifesaving heart failure treatments.
“Women often times are underrepresented in studies and kind of looking at what are the best ways to manage heart health,” Dr. Saint Clair said. “Heart disease is the number one killer of women. And for me, as an OB/gyn, I would add that heart disease is also the number one killer of pregnant women and new moms. So this is spanning a woman’s entire life span.”
Dr. Saint Clair emphasized the need for all stakeholders (local, state, and federal elected officials and policymakers, community leaders, health care industry leaders, and researchers) to work together to address these ongoing disparities.
“It’s critically important to really get as far as we can into the root causes of these disparities and really addressing them one by one. We know that there’s not one single thing. We may find a list of ten problems that are contributing to one outcome, but we have to systematically go after each one of those,” Dr, Saint Clair said. “And we have to hold ourselves accountable… Now that we have some of this information, we need to respond and be accountable to making changes, and tracking the outcomes to see ‘Are we making progress? Are things improving?’”