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Heart attacks more common among the unemployed – STUDY

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People who recently lost their jobs are more likely to suffer a heart attack than their employed peers, a new study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine has stated.

Researchers found that people were especially likely to have a heart attack during their first year of being out of work, and that each successive job loss was tied to a higher chance of heart problems among more than 13,000 older adults though it’s not clear if or how unemployment, itself, might have caused the extra heart attacks.

Job seekers
File Photo: Job seekers
Researchers on the report from the Duke Clinical Research Institute in Durham, North Carolina, said a combination of stress, worsening lifestyle and poor management of chronic conditions without health insurance may be to blame. Those without a job may be unable to control their high blood pressure or to manage their diabetes (with their usual medication), or rates of smoking may be exacerbated.

But it’s too early to know for sure what’s behind the link which means it’s also too early to recommend ways to ward off heart problems among the recently-unemployed.

The new data came from a large U.S. study of 13,451 adults who were interviewed every other year, for an average of 12 years, about their health, lifestyle and life events such as employment and job loss.

Study participants were 55 years old at the onset, on average, and two-thirds of them were overweight or obese. One in seven people was initially unemployed. During the research period, 1,061 of all participants – almost eight percent – had a heart attack.

Researchers found the more times people had been let go leading up to the latest survey, the higher their chance of having a heart attack. Unemployment was still linked to a 35 percent increased risk of heart attack after the researchers accounted for the effects of poverty and education, as well as race, age and other heart risks.

Researchers weren’t surprised to find the association, but we were surprised to find that the effects were so large, on par with classic risk factors such as hypertension and diabetes. They said the associations are strong, and they remain despite accounting for a whole host of possible explanations.

While more research is needed to understand why unemployment may affect health and who is most at risk, people who recently lost their jobs, as well as doctors who treat them, need to be aware of added heart risks and be extra vigilant about the signs and symptoms of a heart attack. There is “a fairly convincing relationship between job loss and adverse health.









Source - Vanguard news

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