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American Heart Month: Awareness, Prevention, and Access to Care

Written by First Stop Health | Feb 19, 2026 9:57:27 PM

 

 

American Heart Month Will Always Matter

Every February, American Heart Month reminds us of something easy to overlook: heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States.

Despite medical advances, new treatments, and decades of public awareness campaigns, cardiovascular disease continues to affect millions of families each year. It does not discriminate by age, gender, or profession. And for many communities, access to preventive care remains uneven.

American Heart Month is not just about wearing red. It is about recognizing risk, encouraging prevention, and making sure more people have access to early care before a crisis happens

The Ongoing Impact of Heart Disease

Heart disease accounts for hundreds of thousands of deaths annually in the U.S. Many of these cases are linked to preventable or manageable risk factors:

    • High blood pressure
    • High cholesterol
    • Diabetes
    • Smoking
    • Obesity
    • Chronic stress

What makes this especially important is that many people live with these conditions without knowing it. Early detection through screenings, routine checkups, and open conversations with providers can significantly reduce long-term risk.

Prevention is powerful. But prevention requires access.

The Role of Stress, Work, and Everyday Life

Heart health is not only about diet and exercise. It is also shaped by stress, sleep, financial strain, caregiving responsibilities, and workplace demands.

Chronic stress has been linked to increased cardiovascular risk. Long work hours, shift work, and limited access to regular care can compound that risk. For caregivers and hourly workers in particular, scheduling in-person appointments can be difficult.

That makes education and awareness even more critical.

What American Heart Month Encourages Us To Do?

American Heart Month calls for practical, everyday action:

    • Know your blood pressure numbers
    • Get routine cholesterol screenings
    • Move your body regularly
    • Reduce tobacco use
    • Prioritize sleep
    • Manage stress intentionally

Even small changes — walking 30 minutes a day, reducing sodium intake, scheduling an annual checkup — can have measurable impact over time.

The earlier risk factors are identified, the more manageable they become.

A Community Responsibility

Heart health is a community issue.

Families, workplaces, healthcare providers, and community leaders all play a role in improving cardiovascular outcomes. Increasing awareness, reducing stigma around health screenings, and encouraging preventive care can save lives.

American Heart Month serves as a reminder that progress happens when awareness turns into action.

Because when more people understand their risks , and have access to care early — outcomes improve.

Rethink how care should feel. 

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