Research focuses on heart health
in Rural women
Newswise — A new study led
by researchers at the Decker School of Nursing at Binghamton
University, State University of New York, will look at ways to
improve heart healthy behaviors among rural women. The work will
be funded by a three year, $150,000 grant from the National
Institute of Nursing Research.
“Cardiovascular disease is the No. 1 killer of women in
this country,” said Associate Professor Pamela Stewart Fahs, the
principal investigator on this grant and director of the
Binghamton University O’Connor Office of Rural Health Studies.
While rural women may not be at higher risk for cardiovascular
disease than the rest of the population, they do face particular
challenges.
For instance, they were among the last groups in the
country to start smoking – and they’re among the last to quit.
Rural women may also have a harder time accessing health care
and messages about healthy habits than suburban or urban women.
“I’ve seen a lot of the issues firsthand,” said Stewart
Fahs, who grew up in southeast Kentucky. “I’ve also seen what
socio-cultural aspects of rural living both protect and cause
problems for those citizens.”
The study will involve a total of 176 women ages 45-65 at
moderate to high risk for cardiovascular disease. Half will be
from Delaware County in New York and the other half will be from
a rural Virginia county.
Researchers will use two techniques in an effort to
encourage study participants to be physically active, eat at
least five servings of fruit and vegetables daily and not smoke.
The first technique, called community intervention, will be
available to all of the women in the study. That process will
involve community leaders in designing a campaign to raise
awareness of heart healthy behaviors through events and public
service announcements.
The second technique, a series of nursing interventions,
will be part of the program for half of the study participants.
Those women will talk regularly with a nurse who will provide
guidance about exercise and nutrition and reinforce information
the women receive about heart healthy behaviors. This group will
also participate in nurse-run group activities focused on diet,
physical activity and tobacco avoidance.
The type of support the women receive will be matched to
their level of interest in changing their behavior, Stewart Fahs
said. For instance, it doesn’t help a woman who hasn’t been
thinking about quitting smoking to encourage her to set a day to
quit. It might be more appropriate to show her images of
smokers’ lungs or provide information about the dangers of
smoking.
“I believe that people are ready to change habits at
different times,” Stewart Fahs said. “We will be matching our
interventions to a person’s readiness to change.”
Graduate student Nikki Austin has worked with cardiac patients
throughout her nursing career. She noted that rural residents
are often underemployed and underinsured and sees this project
as a chance to help people before they’re facing a cardiac
crisis.
“It’s better for them, certainly, to be healthy,” Austin
said. “I like the idea of giving them the keys they need to be
well