EDITORIAL FROM THE DESK OF REPRESENTATIVE MIKE MILLICAN
For Immediate Release:
In Alabama, Life And Death Are A Matter Of The Heart
While all the adults may see President’s Day as the only legal holiday on
the February’s calendar, for most kids and sweethearts, Valentine’s Day is
the only real holiday in the last month of winter. Even though the day falls
on a Sunday this year, every parent is helping their children fill out
little cards for classmates, candies are being bought and the florists are
gearing up for their biggest day of the year.
The heart is the symbol for Valentine’s Day, and it is appropriate that
February is also American Heart Month, an awareness campaign of the American
Heart Association. Since 1963, Congress has required the president to
proclaim this month for the heart (the physical one not the emotional one)
to raise awareness of heart disease and what can be done to prevent it.
The statistics are staggering. Cardiovascular diseases, including things
like stroke, kill more Americans than anything else. Heart disease is our
nation's number one cause of death, and when we look at what heart disease
does in Alabama, the numbers seem to get even worse.
Heart disease also is the leading cause of death in Alabama, accounting for
almost a third of all deaths in our state. When you add death caused by
stroke, the numbers go even higher. There is no great mystery why heart
disease claims so many here; we rank among the highest in the country for
risk factors that lead to heart disease.
Almost one-third of us have high blood pressure, more than one-third have
high blood cholesterol. Almost a quarter of Alabamian smoke, almost
two-thirds of us are overweight, and one in ten suffers from diabetes. It is
these kinds of grim risk factors that drive heart disease in our state.
What may be surprising to many is that heart disease, stroke, and other
cardiovascular diseases are the number one killer of women in Alabama,
accounting for 35.5 percent of all female deaths. The epidemic among women
has reached such proportions that on average 23 women die from heart disease
and stroke in Alabama each day. That is why raising public awareness of
heart disease and its prevention is so critical.
The Alabama Department of Public Health has been doing its best with limited
resources to combat the problem and raise public awareness. The Alabama
Cardiovascular Health (CVH) program has been working with emergency first
responders to improve the response to cardiovascular incidents, along with
updating things like stroke protocols.
Contact Information
State House: Room 128
11 S. Union Street
Montgomery, AL 36130
(334) 242-7768 Home: 995 Country Estates Drive
Hamilton, AL 35570
Home Phone:
FAX:
(205) 921-3214
(334) 353-3350
Email: mike.millican@alhouse.gov