Heart-healthy
behavior Is a Good News-Bad News story
Newswise — Most Americans engage in behaviors
that can help prevent or delay the onset of
heart disease, according to the latest News and
Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality.
The good news is that over 93 percent of adults
surveyed by AHRQ in 2004 reported that they
engaged in at least one of the three
heart-healthy behaviors recommended by the
American Heart Association -- not smoking,
exercising regularly, and maintaining a healthy
weight. Specifically:
• More than half (56 percent) said that they
engaged in moderate to vigorous physical
activity three times a week.
• Over three-quarters (78 percent) reported that
they currently did not smoke.
• More than one-third (39 percent) reported
their Body Mass Index to be under 25, which is
below what is considered to be overweight or
obese.
The bad news is that only 18 percent of
adults reported that they practiced all
three heart-healthy behaviors. Approximately
42 percent practiced two behaviors, and 34
percent practiced only one.
• Some 6.5 percent of adults do not engage in
any of the healthy behaviors.
• 18.3 percent of adults who had been told by a
doctor that they had indicators of heart disease
continued to smoke.
AHRQ, a part of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, works to improve the
quality, safety, efficiency, and effectiveness
of health care in the United States. The data in
this AHRQ News and Numbers comes from the
Agency's Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, a
highly detailed source of information on the
health services that Americans use, how
frequently they use them, the cost of these
services, and how they are paid.