The American Heart Association’s Essential 8™ provides an excellent checklist for improving cardiovascular health and reducing the principal risk factors for cardiovascular disease, heart attack, cardiac arrest, and stroke.

Originally developed in 2010 as “Life’s Simple 7,” the American Heart Association’s construct has been updated to “Life’s Essential 8.” The updated construct includes sleep guidelines and new advice for some of the other seven health factors that can be applied throughout a person’s entire life course, starting from birth.

At AED Leader, we fully support all actions that Americans can take to improve their heart health and reduce their risk of cardiovascular events. Combined with emergency preparedness, taking preventative action by applying the AHA Essential 8 could significantly boost Americans’ quality of life while preventing tens or even hundreds of thousands of untimely deaths in the United States each year.

1. Healthy Diet

Eating a healthy diet is the first and most powerful thing you can do to improve cardiovascular health. Work toward an overall healthy eating pattern that focuses on:

To improve your diet:

2. Physical Activity

Together with diet quality, regular physical activity is one of the best things you can do for your heart health as well as your psychological health. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that all adults aim for a minimum of:

Children and teens should get at least 60 minutes of exercise per day, including a mixture of unstructured play and more structured activities like swimming, cycling, and sports. Physical activity in children and young people is essential for healthy development and sets good habits for life.

3. Quit Tobacco

Nicotine exposure increases your risk for a wide range of chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disease. Nicotine reduces “good” cholesterol levels, promotes plaque buildup[mfn]nhlbi.nih.gov[/mfn], and increases the risk of coronary heart disease and stroke by 2 to 4 times[mfn]cdc.gov[/mfn]. Smoking cigarettes is responsible for around a third of deaths from heart disease.

The effects of tobacco are the same whether you smoke traditional cigarettes or use other inhaled nicotine delivery systems like vaping. Secondhand smoke can be just as bad as first-hand smoke. By AHA estimates, around one-third of American children aged 3 to 11 are exposed to secondhand smoke.

The American Heart Association has a handy factsheet[mfn]heart.org[/mfn] with tips for quitting cigarettes and your doctor can give you advice as well. Inform yourself about the risks of smoking—both for yourself and those around you—and focus on the benefits of quitting. With a solid strategy and perseverance, you can kick the habit and improve your heart health.

4. Get Enough Sleep

Healthy sleep is the newest addition to the AHA’s Essential 8. This metric was added because—in the words of the AHA—”adequate sleep promotes healing, improves brain function, and reduces the risk for chronic diseases.”

Poor sleep health increases the risk of high blood pressure, obesity, dementia, depression, and cardiovascular disease, and tends to lead to poor food choices and increased cigarette smoking, which compound the negative effects of sleep deprivation on heart health.

The ideal sleep duration for an adult is 7-9 hours. Fewer than 7 hours is considered sleep deprivation and sleeping for more than 9 hours each night has been linked with health problems[mfn]webmd.com[/mfn] including diabetes, obesity, headaches, back pain, depression, heart disease, and an increased overall risk of death.

Children need:

To improve sleep health, the AHA recommends:

5. Manage Weight

Obesity is a common risk factor for heart disease as well as heart attack and sudden cardiac arrest. By keeping yourself at a healthy weight, you decrease your risk for many kinds of diseases (including heart disease and type 2 diabetes) and put less pressure on your joints.

Body mass index is often used as a gauge for determining what a healthy weight would be for any individual. Your BMI is a numerical value determined by dividing your weight in kilograms (kg) by your height in meters (m) squared (you can use the NIH standard body mass index calculator[mfn]nhlbi.nih.gov[/mfn] to determine your BMI). A BMI of 20-25 is considered healthy.

If you do need to lose weight, the AHA recommends:

6. Control Cholesterol

Cholesterol is a fatty substance that’s produced by your body. It’s also present in animal foods.

There are two types of cholesterol:

To keep your blood cholesterol in the healthy range:

7. Manage Blood Sugar

High levels of blood sugar can cause damage to the heart, nerves, kidneys, and eyes. High blood sugar is also a risk factor for developing Type 2 diabetes, which in turn is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and stroke.

To know whether your blood sugar levels are healthy, a medical professional can take a blood glucose reading and tell you whether your levels are normal, pre-diabetic, or diabetic.

To keep your blood glucose levels healthy:

8. Manage Blood Pressure

High blood pressure puts additional strain on your heart, which is why keeping your blood pressure in the healthy range is one of the eight pillars of a heart-healthy lifestyle.

You can lower blood pressure naturally by:

  1. Eating a nutritious diet focused on whole foods
  2. Getting enough physical activity
  3. Quitting cigarettes
  4. Improving the quality and length of your sleep

See How You’re Doing with the “My Life Check” Assessment Tool

Curious about how your health behaviors rate on the AHA’s Essential 8? You can find out by completing the My Life Check assessment[mfn]mlc.heart.org[/mfn], an online tool that was developed as a way of quantifying cardiovascular health.

To complete the assessment, you will need:

Once you’ve entered your personal information, the program uses an algorithm that aggregates your scores for each metric (out of 100) to give you a composite cardiovascular health score (also as a number out of 100). When you receive your score, you can view your individual scores for each metric to see what you need to do to improve your cardiovascular health.

How Americans Track on the MLC Scale

The Prevalence Estimates from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey [mfn]health.gov[/mfn](NHANES), 2013-2018, provide an indication of how Americans track on each of the AHA’s Essential 8. This data is taken from The Cooper Institute website. As you’ll see, the three categories in which people scored the lowest were diet, physical activity, and body weight.

Metric Men Women
Diet 38.1 51.9
Physical Activity 54.0 49.2
Nicotine Exposure 63.1 75.1
Sleep Duration 84.0 85.3
Body Weight 57.8 57.1
Body Cholesterol 64.8 69.9
Blood Sugar 76.8 80.0
Blood Pressure 67.6 73.8

The data can also be broken down by racial group. In this table, the numbers represent each group’s average composite score.

Racial Group Average Composite Score
Non-Hispanic Black 59.7
Non-Hispanic White 65.7
Mexican 62.8
Other Hispanic 65.1
Asian 68.5

No matter how you’re tracking now or how your scores compare to the average for your racial group, everything you do to improve your heart health now will provide long-term benefits and reduce your risk of heart disease and early death.

How Prevention and Emergency Preparedness Work Together to Save Lives

At AED Leader, our main focus is equipping Americans to respond quickly and effectively when someone goes into sudden cardiac arrest. To this end, we provide first aid and AED training and sell automated external defibrillators from the top six FDA-approved brands, including perennial favorites like the Physio-Control LIFEPAK CR2 and the Philips HeartStart FRx.

However, while preparing for cardiac arrest is essential—AEDs save around 1,700 additional lives in the United States every year[mfn]nih.gov[/mfn] and are mandated by law in many businesses and institutions—working on heart-healthy lifestyle habits could prevent you from ever developing heart disease and drastically lower your risk for heart attack, stroke, and cardiac arrest.

Cardiac Arrest Happens to Healthy People Too

As a counterbalance to what we’ve just said, even healthy people with no known risk factors can suffer cardiac arrest. High-profile deaths due to SCA among athletes, including marathon runners and basketball players, are proof of the fact that anyone can suffer sudden cardiac arrest, no matter how healthy and fit they are.

For this reason, the best approach is to follow the AHA’s Essential 8 and prepare for SCA by learning cardiopulmonary resuscitation and knowing where your nearest AEDs are located. With immediate chest compressions and rapid defibrillation (delivered with an onsite AED), SCA survival rates can be as high as 85%[mfn]ncbi.nlm.nih.gov[/mfn] compared to less than 10% when nothing is done before emergency medical services arrive.

Life’s Essential 8 Combined with CPR and Defibrillators Could Save Hundreds of Thousands of Lives Every Year

In the United States, around 365,000 people suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrests each year, according to data from the American Heart Association. Furthermore, cardiovascular disease was the underlying cause of death for more than 874,000 Americans in 2019[mfn]professional.heart.org[/mfn]. However, according to the World Health Organization, up to 80% of premature heart attacks and strokes are preventable with lifestyle changes. And as we mentioned earlier, up to 85% of SCA deaths could be prevented with widespread training and ready access to AEDs.

To live your best life and help those you love, taking the importance of heart health seriously applying the AHA’s Essential 8 is an excellent place to start. Then, learn CPR and how to use an AED and know where to find a defibrillator in an emergency (there are often portable defibrillators in hospitals, schools, fitness clubs, shopping malls, public buildings, and dental offices). Once you combine these two powerful tools, you could potentially save multiple lives!
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