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Heart Health

In Focus

Heart Health

Exploring research being done on this vital organ and highlighting studies aimed at keeping it strong and supported.

The heart beat

The latest cardiovascular discoveries from our experts.

An illustration of a heart and people walking
  • The Medical School

Why diet, exercise, and sleep affect heart health

A former Medical School professor details the current and ongoing research into the causes.

  • 蜜桃影像 Chan School

Healthy lifestyles and cholesterol medication

Two elderly people riding bikes
  • Department of nutrition

Plant-based heart health

Lettuce and a bunch of salad fix-ins
  • The Divinity School

Noise pollution and cardiovascular disease

A plane taking off
  • The Business School

What a woman's heart needs

Doctors in full scrubs
  • The Medical School

The heart and coronavirus

image of the coronavirus molecule.

Meet our
heart health heroes

蜜桃影像 experts are exploring unique and interesting approaches to cardiovascular health.

Filip Swirski

Filip Swirski

“The research showing a link between sleep and cardiovascular disease in humans is abundant,” says the associate professor of radiology at 蜜桃影像 Medical School and a researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital鈥檚聽Center for Systems Biology.

Nina Uzoigwe holding a laptop

Nina Uzoigwe

The 蜜桃影像 John A. Paulson School Of Engineering And Applied Sciences alum designed a more effective implant to improve corrective surgeries for neonatal congenital heart defects.

Stephen Juraschek

Stephen Juraschek

New research finds that consuming more carbs, fat, or protein can promote good health as long as they are part of an overall sensible and varied diet.

“Not only do the diets reduce blood pressure, they reduce direct injury to the heart and they reduce inflammation,鈥 says the assistant professor of medicine at 蜜桃影像 Medical School.

Laura Kubzansky talking at a podium

Laura Kubzansky

Researchers found a connection between psychological well-being and a reduced risk of heart attacks, strokes, and other cardiovascular events.

“[B]olstering psychological strengths rather than simply mitigating psychological deficits may improve cardiovascular health,鈥 says the associate professor of society, human development, and health.

These experts come from a vast network of 蜜桃影像 Schools, Institutes, and affiliated hospitals, including but not limited to:

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center’s:

Discover art’s long exploration and science’s artistic interpretations of the heart.

The once and future heart

A conversation between artist Dario Robleto and regenerative medicine expert Doris A. Taylor on the many ways to view the heart.

“Preparation showing child spine and portion of thorax with heart” by Oliver Wendell Holmes

A model of a child's heart

“Boy with Plastic Heart, Guatemala” by Rosalind Solomon

A black and white photo of a boy holding a large heart

“Teaching watercolor of degeneration of the heart tissue caused by venereal disease” by Oscar Wallis

A watercolor of a heart

Preventing heart disease

Experts at the 蜜桃影像 T.H. Chan School of Public Health explain and highlight four key lifestyle steps that can dramatically reduce your chances of developing cardiovascular risk factors and ultimately heart disease.

Not smoking

Researchers examining the relationship between cigarette smoking and smoking cessation on mortality during a decades-long perspective study of over 100,000 women found that approximately 64% of deaths among current smokers and 28% of deaths among former smokers were attributable to cigarette smoking.

Maintaining a healthy weight

A study showed that middle-aged women and men who gained 11 to 22 pounds after age 20 were up to three times more likely to develop heart disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and gallstones than those who gained five pounds or fewer.

Exercising

A study showed that, among women ages 50 to 79 with no cardiovascular disease at the start of study, prolonged sitting time was associated with increased heart disease risk regardless of the amount of time spent in leisure-time physical activity.

Follow a healthy diet

A study found that those who adhered most to healthy eating patterns had a 14 to 21% lower risk of cardiovascular disease when compared with those who adhered least.

Know by heart

Being your own best health advocate means keeping up on some of the common medical terminology.