
New Service for
TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items from Amazon
Knowledge of cholesterol numbers lagging
among women
Newswise — Adult women
are more than twice as likely to know how
much they weighed in high school as they are
to know their current cholesterol number,
and only half of women have had their
cholesterol tested in the past year,
according to the results of a nationwide
survey released today.
The survey, conducted
by the Society for Women’s Health Research,
a Washington, D.C., based advocacy
organization, found that 79 percent of women
know how much they weighed in high school
but less than one-third know their current
cholesterol number. Of the women who had a
recent cholesterol test, only 57 percent
could actually recall their cholesterol
number.
Data from the survey
suggests a major disconnect between women
understanding the risks associated with high
cholesterol and actually taking action to
monitor and control it.
A majority of the women
surveyed (63 percent) said they were
concerned that high cholesterol will be a
health concern during their lifetime and
almost 60 percent of women said they were
actively trying to manage their cholesterol,
yet only 32 percent knew their cholesterol
number.
Most women recognize
the health risks of having high cholesterol.
Nearly nine out of 10 women surveyed (88
percent) know that high cholesterol is
linked to hardening of the arteries and
heart disease, and almost as many women (85
percent) know high cholesterol can lead to
stroke.
“Clearly, strides have
been made in educating women on the risks of
high cholesterol, but the disconnect between
awareness and action needs to be addressed,”
said Phyllis Greenberger, president and CEO
of the Society for Women’s Health Research.
“Knowing your cholesterol number is the
first step in controlling cholesterol. That
number is certainly more important than what
you weighed in high school.”
As for ways to help
control cholesterol, nearly all women (96
percent) understand that exercise can play a
part in fighting high cholesterol with just
about as many women knowing that eating more
fruits and vegetables (95 percent) and
eating foods low in fat (94 percent) can
also contribute to better heart health. In
addition, 94 percent of women knew that
there are medicines, called statins,
available which can help you lower
cholesterol if diet and exercise are not
effective.
The results of the
telephone survey of 524 women, conducted by
GfK Custom Research North America, from June
29 - July 1 2007, also showed that:
• One in three (32.9
percent) did not know that women can
exercise regularly and maintain a healthy
diet, but still have dangerously high
cholesterol levels.
• Women with a family history of high
cholesterol are only slightly more likely
than the general population (66 vs. 60
percent) to say they are actively trying to
manage their cholesterol levels.
• More than one-third (36.3 percent) of
women were surprised to learn that high
cholesterol has no symptoms.
• Less than four in 10 (35 percent) women
know any of the four key numbers for
monitoring cholesterol: total cholesterol
level, LDL level, HDL level, and
triglyceride (blood fat) level.
• Half of American women are not familiar
with the terms LDL (47 percent) and HDL (49
percent), which are critical to managing
cholesterol and heart health.
• Ninety percent of women (90.6 percent)
believe that some cholesterol is good, yet
only a third of women (38 percent) correctly
identified HDL as the “good” cholesterol. An
equal number got it wrong.
• Only 21 percent of women know their high
density lipoprotein (their HDL level – the
“good” cholesterol), with an equally low
number knowing their low density lipoprotein
(their LDL level – the “bad” cholesterol).
• Women are equally concerned about
developing heart disease (71 percent) and
breast cancer (70 percent) in their lifetime
and 43 percent were surprised to learn that
heart disease kills six times as many women
as breast cancer.
• Half of the females surveyed (50.2
percent) knew that atherosclerosis was
hardening of the arteries. One-third (33.9
percent) believed it to be loss of bone
density and 24 percent thought it was
curvature of the spine.
...
...
...