The Borneo Post

Women’s Day 2019: Four ways women can look after their health

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FRIDAY 8 Mar celebrated Internatio­nal Women’s Day 2019, and in marking the occassion, here we round up some of the findings from recent research on women’s health, and some steps all women can take to look after themselves.

New findings from the longterm Women’s Health Initiative study have linked fried food and sugary drinks to a higher risk of death in post-menopausal women.

Back in January researcher­s found that women who ate one or more servings of fried food a day showed an eight per cent higher risk of death from all causes of cardiovasc­ular disease, compared with those who did not eat fried food.

Results published just weeks later showed that women who consumed two or more artificial­ly sweetened beverages each day were more likely to have a stroke, develop heart disease, and experience a fatal or non-fatal heart attack, compared to women who drank diet drinks less than once a week or not at all. Don’t work too many long hours

A recent large-scale UK study which analysed data on 11,215 men and 12,188 women found that women who work long hours may have a higher risk of depression. The researcher­s used a standard working week of 35 to 40 hours as a reference for categorisi­ng working hours into less than 35 hours a week, 41 to 55 hours a week, defined as long working hours, and 55 hours a week or more, defined as extra-long working hours. They found that women who worked extra long hours and/or who worked most weekends or every weekend had the worst mental health of all the participan­ts, with significan­tly more depressive symptoms than women who worked standard hours.

A European study published at the end of 2018 found that women wait longer than men to get help for a heart attack, and urged women who experience symptoms to seek medical attention immediatel­y. The researcher­s said that despite the belief that more men experience heart attacks, they are just as common in women, with ischemic heart disease the leading cause of death in both males and females. They also pointed out that although women and men have a similar amount of pain during a heart attack, the location may be different. Whereas men usually have pain in the chest and left arm, meaning they are likely to think it’s a heart attack, women are more likely to have back, shoulder, or stomach pain. However, both men and women benefit equally from fast treatment.

According to a study published just last month, older women who spend most of their day sitting down may be at a higher risk for cardiovasc­ular diseases such as heart disease and stroke. After following 5,638 women aged 63 to 97 for a period of five years, the researcher­s found that women who had the highest level of sedentary time, equal to 11 hours a day or more, also had the highest risk for cardiovasc­ular disease when compared to those with the lowest level of sedentary time, equal to nine hours a day or less.

 ?? — Relaxnews photo ?? Sedentary lifestyles increase women’s risk of cardiovasc­ular diseases such as heart disease and stroke, so keeping moving is one of the ways women can look after their health.
— Relaxnews photo Sedentary lifestyles increase women’s risk of cardiovasc­ular diseases such as heart disease and stroke, so keeping moving is one of the ways women can look after their health.

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