Middle-aged adults with recently diagnosed heart disease may be less sexually active than their healthier peers, a recent U.K. study suggests. Researchers analyzed survey data from about 3,000 men and ...
In a first-of-its-kind study, research to be presented at the American College of Cardiology’s 71st Annual Scientific Session found that wearable-device data on heart rate and rhythm may be less ...
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) -- A little less salt could go a long way in reducing the risk of heart disease, according to a new study published Monday in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
March 15 (UPI) --Fewer Americans are having heart attacks these days, and those that do are dying less often, thanks to heart attack prevention techniques, a new study says. Since the mid-90s, ...
Women are less likely than men to be given treatment for a potentially fatal heart condition, according to a new analysis. Researchers in the UK found women are 11% less likely to be referred to a ...
For adults who have survived a heart attack or stroke, taking aspirin regularly may reduce the risk of another cardiovascular event. But a new study suggests that less than half of these ...
California’s Black and Hispanic communities may be falling further behind whites in the quality of care they receive for heart attacks, despite recent medical efforts aimed at improving the standards ...
Researchers put five popular wrist-worn fitness trackers to the test to find out how accurately they gauge heart rate across several types of exercise and intensity levels. Based on their findings, ...
The less education people have, the greater their risk of eventually developing chronic heart failure, a large new study finds. Researchers say lower education levels are basically a stand-in for ...
A new study found that reducing time spent watching television to less than one hour per day could prevent 11% of cases of coronary heart disease Researchers found this was the case regardless of the ...
Women received important medical procedures less often or later than men, the team reported in the American Heart Association journal Circulation: Heart Failure. Women were also more likely to die in ...
Heart attack prevention and outcomes have dramatically improved for American adults in the past two decades, according to a Yale study in JAMA Network Open. Compared to the mid-1990s, Americans today ...