Showing posts with label heart disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heart disease. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Ask a Health Advocate: How can quitting tobacco help my heart?



What is the leading cause of death of smokers aged 35 or older?  If you answered lung cancer, you’d be wrong.  Heart disease claims more smokers’ lives every year than lung cancer.  

Cigarette smoking is the main preventable cause of death and illness in the U.S.
To reduce your risk of heart disease and other health conditions, it’s important to quit tobacco as well as aim to reduce your exposure to secondhand smoke.

Smoking harms your heart

The chemicals in tobacco smoke hurt your heart and blood vessels in many ways.  Here are a few examples:

·     Stresses your heart. Smoking raises your blood pressure and heart rate, making your heart work harder than normal.  Over time, this stress can weaken your heart, making it less able to pump blood to other parts of the body. This increases risk of heart disease, including heart attacks.
·     Thickens your blood. Smoking makes your blood thicker, making it more difficult for your blood to carry oxygen. It can also increase your chance of forming blood clots that block blood flow to your heart and brain. Over time, thick blood can damage blood vessel walls, increasing your risk of heart attack or stroke.
·     Increase fatty deposits. Smoking lowers your HDL cholesterol (sometimes called "good" cholesterol) and raises your LDL cholesterol (sometimes called "bad" cholesterol). Smoking also increases your triglyceride level. Triglycerides are a type of fat found in the blood. Over time, these fats narrow the arteries and block normal blood flow to the heart and brain, which may cause a heart attack or stroke. 

How you can reduce your heart disease risk

Quitting smoking reduces your heart disease risk immediately, and your risk continues to decrease over time.

·     Your risk is cut in half 1 year after quitting. If you have not developed heart disease within 15 years of quitting, your risk is nearly the same as the risk in someone who has never smoked.
·     Deaths from heart disease are reduced by one-third in people who quit smoking compared with people who continue smoking. Repeat heart attacks are reduced by about the same amount.
·     Lower risk of sudden cardiac death, second heart attacks, and death from other chronic diseases for those who already have heart disease
·     Your risk of atherosclerosis and blood clots declines over time after you quit smoking. Atherosclerosis is a condition where plaque builds up in the arteries, which can lead to heart attack or stroke.

Quitting tobacco isn’t easy, but it can be done with the right resources and support. In fact, there are more former smokers – nearly 50 million -- than current smokers in the U.S.  Are you ready to put out that last cigarette? If you’re a Health Advocate member with access to the Wellness Coaching program, call your Wellness Coach and ask how you can quit. If you are not a Health Advocate member, we encourage you to check out the free tobacco cessation resources available on smokefree.gov

Have a question for a Health Advocate? Email nhess@healthadvocate.com, and your question may be the topic of an upcoming “Ask a Health Advocate” column!

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Ask a Health Advocate: I have heart disease. How can advocacy help me?



According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there are currently 26.8 million Americans who have been diagnosed with heart disease--that's 12% of Americans. Heart disease includes a variety of conditions related to the heart, such as heart attack, coronary heart disease, congenital heart disease, and congestive heart failure. WebMD notes that heart disease is the leading cause of death for men and women in the United States.

Managing heart disease can mean undergoing major lifestyle changes. There is no quick fix for heart disease--but there's a lot you can do to manage the disease and live healthier to reduce the risk of your heart disease worsening. You don't have to make these changes alone, either. You can enlist an advocate to help you. Your employer may offer an advocacy service as part of your employee benefits package; you might seek out a consumer-based advocacy service such as Health Proponent; or you could simply designate a trusted family member or friend to help you better manage your heart disease. Check out the many ways an advocate can help you in this situation:

* An advocate can connect you to the proper medical personnel. A primary care physician or a cardiologist can help treat your heart disease. A nutritionist could help you design a low-cholesterol, heart-healthy diet. A wellness coach could help you plan an exercise regimen. If mortality-related thoughts brought about by your heart disease are making you stressed or anxious, a mental health specialist can help you better handle these thoughts.

* An advocate can help make sure that medical providers take your insurance, and they can set up appointments for you or help arrange transportation to and from these appointments.

* Let your advocate help reduce your stress by having them handle a number of financial issues for you, such as researching pricing for medical procedures and services as well as negotiating costs of medical treatment with insurance companies and medical providers.

* The advocate can also help you by reducing your insurance-related stress. If your insurance company says they won't pay for a treatment or procedure, ask your advocate to handle the insurance company's denial and file an appeal on your behalf.

* Has a medical provider recommended surgery or prescription medication to treat your condition? Your advocate can handle lining up a second opinion for you so that you have the opinions and advice of two medical professionals and can make an informed decision about the type of treatment you're most comfortable with.

* If you smoke, know that an advocacy program like Health Advocate offers a Tobacco Cessation program as part of their benefits. Quitting smoking will not only save you money, but also has heart-healthy benefits!

* Let your advocate be responsible for reminding you about your yearly checkups and other important health screenings (they can set these appointments up for you, too).

* Some advocacy services offer Nurse Lines that members can take advantage of. Nurse Lines, staffed by registered nurses, often have extended hours and in some cases are available 24/7. Members can call the Nurse Line to talk to the nurses about any strange symptoms they're having and whether or not those symptoms necessitate a trip to the emergency room, urgent care, or other medical facility.

* An advocate can do the research on experimental heart-related treatments and clinical studies that you may qualify for.

* If you suspect that office-related stress could be contributing to your heart disease, check into whether an EAP + Work/Life service is part of your advocacy company's benefits. EAP + Work/Life can give you suggestions on how to maintain a better work/life balance that could result in you being less stressed, which is also a heart-healthy change.

Managing your heart disease is a lifelong commitment. It could require years of treatment and a medical team that includes many different medical professionals. This could result in piles of paperwork and bills to sort through, many phone calls to your medical team or insurance company, translating explanations of benefits or doctor-ese, resolving billing errors or insurance claim denials, and having overnight stays in the hospital. All of these things can be intimidating and stressful. You don't have to endure it alone. Recruit a health advocate to do the leg work for you so that you can focus on being as healthy as possible.

Curious about how a health advocate can help you? Email your questions to nhess@healthadvocate.com.