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Work Stress Raises Women's Risk Of Heart Disease And Stroke

MARILYNN MARCHIONE   11/14/10 07:14 PM ET  AP

Work Stress

CHICAGO — Working women are equal to men in a way they'll wish they weren't. Female workers with stressful jobs were more likely than women with less job strain to suffer a heart attack or a stroke or to have clogged arteries, a big federally funded study found.

Worrying about losing a job can raise heart risks, too, researchers found.

The results seem sure to resonate in a weak economy with plenty of stress about jobs – or lack of them. The mere fact this study was done is a sign of the times: Past studies focused on men, the traditional breadwinners, and found that higher job stress raised heart risks. This is the longest major one to look at stress in women, who now make up nearly half of the workforce.

"The reality is these women don't have the same kind of jobs as men" and often lack authority or control over their work, said Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, director of the Women and Heart Disease program at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. "It's not just going to work, it's what happens when you get there."

Steinbaum had no role in the study, which was led by Dr. Michelle Albert, a cardiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Results were reported Sunday at an American Heart Association conference in Chicago.

The research involved 17,415 participants in the Women's Health Study, a long-running trial looking at heart disease and cancer prevention. The women were healthy, 57 years old on average, and had worked full or part-time when the study began in 1999.

Most were health professionals, "anything from being a nurse's aide all the way to a Ph.D.," Albert said. They filled out surveys about their jobs, rating statements like "My job requires working very fast," and "I am free from competing demands that others make."

Researchers put them in four groups based on stress they reported and looked 10 years later to see how they fared.

Women with demanding jobs and little control over how to do them were nearly twice as likely to have suffered a heart attack as women with less demanding jobs and more control. The high-stress group had a 40 percent greater overall risk of heart problems, including heart attacks, strokes or clogged arteries needing bypass surgery or an artery-opening angioplasty procedure.

Women worried about losing their jobs had higher blood pressure, cholesterol and body weight.

Stress can harm by releasing "fight or flight" hormones, spurring inflammation and raising blood pressure, Steinbaum said.

It did a number on Jackie Morgan, 46, a suburban Boston woman who is on her second medical leave of absence in two years from a teleconference center, where she managed 16 operators running corporate conference calls.

"Dropped calls? Somebody's line not open? You're running from operator to operator to handle problems that occur during the call," she explained. "It's very stressful. When I tell people about it, they look at me like I have three heads. I feel like I should have Rollerblades on."

Her heart problems started in the summer of 2008, with a crush of calls related to auto company bailouts.

"I just started getting chest pains" and collapsed while out walking one night, she said. Tests found no signs of heart disease, but doctors gave her nitroglycerin pills, which can relieve chest tightness due to constricted heart arteries.

"Sure enough, when the pain came again a few other times I took the nitro and boom, the pain was gone," Morgan said.

Doctors should ask about stress along with traditional heart risk factors like smoking and blood pressure, Albert said. "We need to start taking that seriously."

She has these tips for workers:

_Exercise. It clears the mind, lifts the mood and curbs other heart risks, such as high blood pressure and cholesterol.

_Limit bringing work home.

_Get a life. Do things with friends, whether they're folks you work with or not.

_Build "me time" into every day. "It can be as little as 10 or 15 minutes to meditate, pray or take a walk," Albert said.

___

Online:

Heart Association: http://www.heart.org

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CHICAGO — Working women are equal to men in a way they'll wish they weren't. Female workers with stressful jobs were more likely than women with less job strain to suffer a heart attack or a str...
CHICAGO — Working women are equal to men in a way they'll wish they weren't. Female workers with stressful jobs were more likely than women with less job strain to suffer a heart attack or a str...
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08:25 AM on 11/24/2010
Thanks God I'm not stressed at work :). Stress is an ignorant state of mind that makes us believe that everything is an emergency when in fact nothing is that important.
Here is an interesting article about how to deal with a stressed friend/colleague http://blog.cyclope-series.com/2010/11/24/how-to-work-out-with-a-stressed-person/
03:10 PM on 11/17/2010
Women face incredible amounts of stress in their daily lives, and this constant anxiety and worry is literally making them sick. When treating patients with high stress levels, I recommend simple guided imagery techniques that can be done anywhere, anytime, with immediate positive health impacts: http://bit.ly/bLpxwE
01:10 AM on 11/16/2010
I'm glad to hear that women are finally being represented more within the context of medical studies. For too long, and perhaps at the behest of companies who perceived that there was a bigger market available for males than for females in the medical field, most medical studies were conducted with females as an afterthought, if at all. Although I don't agree with the amount of medicalization that has occurred in this country for natural life events - like birth and death, that are wont to occur within a lifetime, I think it's also ridiculous that in past studies about more specialized conditions have completely marginalized women.
08:51 PM on 11/15/2010
Stress kills is what the American Heart Association is confirming. That more women taking traditionally male dominated social roles and heart problems such(heart attacks, angina, strokes and accumulation of arterial damage) are related shouldn't come as a surprise. Both heart and psychological health experts have looked at this correlation and documented it. Stress hormones such adrenalin may raise the blood pressure by constricting the arteries. If salt and cholesterol are prevalent the risk of pressure is greater. The impedance of oxygenated blood getting to the heart muscle or the brain becomes riskier. Anger, stress, , poor diet in obese particularly makes for a ticking time bomb. Stress hormones such as corticosteroids also draw in more salt and water as well as reduce your resistance making you more vulnerable to stress. Stress is associated with increasing oxygen free radicals that cause oxidation of cholesterol. This process causes more scarring in the arteries due to inflammation. As women lose the cardio-protection from estrogen loss the risk of high stress jobs will impact their health and put them at risk of a cardio-vacular event(stroke, heart attack).What women can do is exercise to increase counter-chemicals such as endorphins and encephalins. Exercise reduces blood pressure as well as improve cardio-pulmonary reserve. Reduce fat intake,take more antioxidants,vitamins. Ask your doc about avoiding homocysteine, methionine. Ask about the blood fibrinogen level that looks at clot potential and get a CRP that determines inflammation in the arteries from stressing sheer forces.
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anitaj
08:36 PM on 11/15/2010
So stress can take a toll on one's health, especially when one has no control over one's situation.

In other news, the sky is blue and the sun will rise in the east.
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stape45
Spin this!
04:51 PM on 11/15/2010
My wife will be retiring five years earlier than planned, due to the fact that slave-driving has become the new “productivity”. Every time someone bails, instead of hiring someone to fill the void, an ever-increasing workload is placed on the remaining employees, and her health has been impaired as a result. (High blood pressure, headaches, fatigue.) The Masters degree she just completed in 2006, was almost a complete waste of time, effort and money.
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yogajan
Well behaved women rarely make history
12:03 PM on 11/15/2010
What is most important here is not to underestimate heart disease in women. The medical community needs to be aware of the risks, the press promote healthy heart living and individuals must respect the science on this and make lifestyle changes accordingly. For many years, medical research on heart disease was on men only, leading women to believe they had hormonal protection. Now we know better and women will need coping mechanisms to reduce stress, cholesterol monitoring, as well as dietary and exercise modifications to stay heart healthy.
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11:46 AM on 11/15/2010
Why is the headline about women when you state in the first lines that it effects us all? To quote my daughter's favorite phrase, no-duhh.
10:32 AM on 11/15/2010
Welcome to the club ladies.
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Rod DK
Tr0lls got the cutest little fangs
10:55 AM on 11/15/2010
Wahaha. exactly what I said to my better half when I read this story for her.
10:17 AM on 11/15/2010
Hopefully we can pass some regulation on companies that will force them to have less stressful jobs, or be forced into a government leadership program. A program paid by the employer to the federal government to lead the company for individuals who claim their job forced unhealthy behavior.
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10:05 AM on 11/15/2010
Men and women alike...suffer in high stress jobs that they grant too much space in their brain to.

It's not at all gender related. And neither is the individual's response should they choose to internalize the stress, or manifest it at home on the heads of their loved ones.
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Bertski
just a guy trying not to be part of the problem
10:05 AM on 11/15/2010
Did we really need studies to confirm that high-stress jobs cause health issues for women, too? Thank you, Professor Obvious.
10:44 AM on 11/15/2010
Exactly what I was thinking.
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LynneSpreen
www.AnyShinyThing.com, For Smart Women
09:27 AM on 11/15/2010
The "fight or flight" reaction is well documented in men. In women, it's "tend and befriend."
www.AnyShinyThing.com, A Blog for Smart Women of a Certain Age
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10:03 AM on 11/15/2010
Tend & befriend...aka...Stockholm Syndrome.
nancynancy
Atheist.
08:33 AM on 11/15/2010
I do not believe the primary burden of responsibility for relieving job related stress should lie with the individual employee. Instead employers should not be allowed to create life shortening, pressure cooker jobs in the first place.