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Nursing
Matters fact
sheets provide quick reference information and international
perspectives from the nursing profession on current
health and social issues.
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Women and Stroke
Stroke is largely preventable. Yet worldwide, 15 million people suffer
strokes each year. Of these, five million die and five million
are left permanently disabled, placing a burden on family and community. i Indeed
stroke is now the second leading cause of death worldwide, after ischemic
heart disease. Demographic projections to 2020 suggest that it will
remain so, given the aging of many populations. ii In
the coming decades a marked increase in the number of stroke events
is expected worldwide, particularly in South American and Asian countries.iii In
parallel, stroke will be among the five most important causes of disability
in developed and developing countries.iv
Stroke in review
A type of cardiovascular disease, stroke is a sudden loss of brain
function caused by reduced blood flow to the brain (ischemic stroke)
or the rupture of blood vessels in the brain (hemorrhagic stroke). Because
neurons in the area die, a variety of effects can result, depending
on where the brain was injured and the extent of the damage. A
stroke can affect a person’s emotions,
behaviour and personality, as well as their ability to move and coordinate movement,
communicate, reason, understand, remember, and more. 1
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Why focus on women?
Stroke is an important public health issue for women and men alike. Traditionally,
however, it has been seen as a man’s disease − a faulty and dangerous
perception. The reality is that stroke accounts for a higher proportion
of deaths among women than men (11 percent vs. 8.4 percent v ),
despite comparable stroke rates. In developing countries, half of all deaths
of women over 50 are due to heart disease and stroke. vi And
in the United States, one in 2.5 women die of heart disease, stroke and other
cardiovascular diseases compared with one in 30 who die of breast cancer. vii Despite
this, only 13 percent of women in the United States believe heart disease and
stroke are the greatest health threat to women; women’s knowledge of stroke
warning signs remains low. viii
Beyond mortality statistics, studies have shown that women who survive
a stroke are more likely than men to have a poor outcome. ix More
stroke survivors over age 65 are women, x and
because of women’s
longer life expectancy, those who survive strokes are more likely to
live alone than men. This means a woman’s hospital stay
will generally be longer than a man’s. Women are also more
likely to be transferred to a chronic care facility rather than go
home or to rehabilitation, xi markedly affecting their independence
and quality of life.
Stroke risk factors
While women and men share many risk factors for stroke, women face additional
gender-specific risk factors. For example, hormone replacement therapy
and oral contraceptive use increase stroke risk. xii
Most risk factors can be modified, treated or controlled, but some
cannot. The more risk factors a person has, the greater their
chance of having a stroke.
Risk factors that can be modified xiii include:
- Hypertension
- Diabetes
- Smoking, especially when combined with oral contraceptives
- Heart disease
- Atrial fibrillation
- Obesity and overweight
- Physical inactivity
- Unhealthy diet
- Stress
- Excessive alcohol intake
- High total cholesterol
- High triglyceride levels
- Carotid artery disease
- Transient ischemic attacks
Risk factors that cannot be modified include: xiv
- Advancing age
- Gender
- Ethnicity/race
- Family history of early stroke
- Previous stroke
Stroke prevention
Knowledge of risk factors and how to minimize them is the first step in stroke
prevention. Preventive measures that can have a significant impact
include: xv
- regular monitoring of blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose
levels;
- smoking prevention or cessation;
- regular exercise;
- eating a diet that includes polyunsaturated and monounsaturated
fats and is rich in fruits, vegetables, fish or omega-3 fatty acids,
whole grains and nuts;
- maintaining a healthy weight; and
- limiting alcohol intake.
Preventive treatment, where indicated, may include the use of anticoagulants
(e.g. warfarin) or antiplatelet agents (e.g. aspirin); carotid endarterectomy
to surgically remove blood vessel blockages; or balloon angioplasty
or stents to remedy fatty buildup that is clogging a vessel. xvi
Warning signs and symptoms
Just as important as learning how to prevent stroke is knowing how to recognize
one, because when a stroke occurs time is of the essence. Immediate
medical care is critical to minimize brain damage and disability. As an American
Stroke Association slogan underlines: Learn to recognize
a stroke. Because time lost is brain lost. If an individual experiences any of the following
they may be having a stroke and need immediate emergency care:
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Sudden numbness or weakness of the face, arm or
leg, especially on one side of the body.
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Sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding.
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Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes.
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Sudden trouble walking, dizziness, loss of balance
or coordination.
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Sudden severe headache with no known cause. xvii |
Of interest is a 2003 study that documented, reportedly for the
first time, a significant difference in the way women and men describe
their symptoms while they’re having a stroke. Women were 62 percent
more likely than men to say they were feeling sensations not on the
list of “traditional” stroke symptoms. In particular, women
were more likely to report pain and changes in consciousness or disorientation. They
were also generally more likely than men to report non-neurological
symptoms like shortness of breath and chest pain. Study researchers
say the results may help explain findings from other research showing
that women often don’t get stroke treatment as quickly as men
. xviii
Acute treatment
Yet, it is immediate treatment that leads to improved outcomes. Acute
treatment for stroke varies depending on whether the stroke is ischemic or
hemorrhagic. For ischemic stroke, interventional therapy with a “clot-busting” drug,
where available, must be administered within three hours of the stroke’s
onset to work best. For hemorrhagic stroke, treatment may include surgery
to prevent rupture and bleeding of aneurysms or arteriovenous malformations. Alternatively,
less-invasive endovascular procedures may be used. xix
Beyond acute treatment
Stroke is different in everyone. Some people make a good recovery while
for others the end of acute treatment is the beginning of a long road to a
dramatically different life. In particular, individuals with disability face
weeks, months, perhaps years of re-learning and rehabilitation. Feelings
of depression and worthlessness are common. But small gains can bring
great joy; these must be celebrated. Hope is important.
Families, too, must adjust to a different pace and a changed loved
one. They wonder if and when life will ever get back to normal. It
may not. Fatigue is common, especially in family members who are full-
or part-time caregivers. Strong, resilient families gradually find
a way to support each other while supporting their loved one. Family
and caregiver self-help groups can be helpful for families finding
it difficult to cope.
Implications for nurses
While helping women and families affected by stroke, nurses can
also work with women of all ages to help evaluate their risk
of stroke and support them in healthy choices aimed at enhancing
stroke prevention. Smoking prevention
and cessation is one area where nurses can be particularly effective
(see the ICN fact sheet Nurses for Tobacco-Free
Life xx ).
Promoting healthy lifestyles in girls and young women should be
a high priority. Although cardiovascular disease generally reveals
itself in middle age or beyond, risk factors are in large part determined
by behaviours learned in childhood and continued in adulthood,
such as smoking, lack of exercise and poor diet. According to the
World Health Organization, these risks are starting to appear earlier
than they once did. xxi
Nurses are also well placed to educate women on the symptoms and
warning signs of stroke; available treatments; helpful resources;
and expectations for acute and longer term care. Families should
be provided with information, included in care decisions and encouraged
to seek respite opportunities where needed.
On a broader level, nurses can draw on their professional knowledge
and expertise to lobby for and contribute to the development of policies
that support health promotion and disease prevention initiatives. This
includes initiatives focused on and supportive of nurses themselves. Finally,
nurses can contribute to the collection of stroke-related data that
can enhance decision-making.
Current initiatives
Reliable stroke data helps justify why a government should invest
in stroke prevention and treatment. With this in mind, the
World Health Organization has developed an international stroke
surveillance system, STEPS-stroke. The
framework provides standardized definitions that will facilitate comparison
of stroke occurrence within a country over time, and allow comparisons
between populations in many countries. Of particular value,
the system will evaluate preventive efforts and guide health planning. xxii
Facts and figures
- Each year in the United States, roughly 700,000 Americans have
a new or recurrent stroke, with nearly 40,000 more women than
men dying of a stroke. xxiii
- African-American women are 1.5 times more likely to have a stroke
and 1.3 times more likely to die of a stroke than white women. xxiv
- Stroke death rates for women are higher in Central and Eastern
Europe than in Northern, Southern and Western Europe. For example,
the death rate in women aged 35 to 74 living in the Russian
Federation is 14 times higher than in Switzerland. xxv
- Almost 60 percent of the 50,000 strokes in Canada each year affect
women. xxvi
Resources
The Atlas of Heart Disease and Stroke. Published in September 2004 by the World
Health Organization, in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Downloadable
at www.who.int/cardiovascular_diseases/resources/atlas/en.
World Heart Federation: www.worldheart.org.
American Heart Association: www.americanheart.org.
American Stroke Association: www.americanstroke.org.
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada: www.heartandstroke.ca
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| i |
World Health Organization (2004). Global burden of stroke. In
Atlas of Heart Disease and Stroke, Geneva, WHO, September 2004,
p.50. |
| ii |
World Health Organization. The WHO Stroke Surveillance System.
Accessed March 2005 at: www.who.int/ncd_surveillance/steps/stroke/en/ (click
on ‘STEPS stroke fact sheet’). |
| iii |
World Health Organization. The Stroke Surveillance Component
of the WHO Global NCD InfoBase. Accessed March 2005 at: www.who.int/ncd_surveillance/steps/stroke/infobase/en/. |
| iv |
Supra note ii. |
| v |
World Heart Federation. Women, heart disease and stroke [fact
sheet]. Accessed March 2005 at: www.worldheart.org/press-factsheets.php (click
on ‘Women’). |
| vi |
Ibid. |
| vii |
American Heart Association. Know Heart and Stroke. Accessed March
2005 at: www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=2787. |
| viii |
American Heart Association. Facts about women and cardiovascular
diseases. Accessed March 2005 at: www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=2876. |
| ix |
University of Texas at Houston. Study Finds
Women’s Stroke
Symptoms Differ from Men’s [press release]. Accessed March
2005 at: www.uthouston.edu/distinctions. |
| x |
Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Women
and Stroke: What you need to know about strokes. Accessed March
2005 at: www.brighamandwomens.org/patient/womenandstroke.asp. |
| xi |
Canadian Women’s Health Network.
Women and Stroke. Accessed March 2005 at: www.cwhn.ca/resources/kickers/stroke.html. |
| xii |
World Health Organization. Women: a special case? In Atlas of
Heart Disease and Stroke, Geneva, WHO, September 2004, p.42. |
| xiii |
American Stroke Association. Stroke Risk Factors. Accessed March
2005 at: www.strokeassociation.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4716. |
| xiv |
Ibid. |
| xv |
Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Women
and Stroke: What you need to know about strokes. Stroke Prevention.
Accessed March 2005 at: www.brighamandwomens.org/patient/womenandstroke.asp. |
| xvi |
American Stroke Association. Acute and Preventive Treatments.
Accessed March 2005 at: www.strokeassociation.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=2532. |
| xvii |
American Stroke Association. Learn to recognize a stroke. Because
time lost is brain lost. Accessed March 2005 at: www.strokeassociation.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=1020. |
| xviii |
University of Texas at Houston. Study Finds
Women’s Stroke
Symptoms Differ from Men’s [press release]. Accessed March
2005 at: www.uthouston.edu/distinctions. |
| xix |
American Stroke Association. Acute and Preventive Treatments.
Accessed March 2005 at: www.strokeassociation.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=2532. |
| xx |
International Council of Nurses. Nurses for Tobacco-Free Life
[fact sheet]. See www.icn.ch (click
on Fact Sheets, then Nurses for Tobacco-Free Life). |
| xxi |
World Health Organization. Risk factors start in childhood and
youth. In Atlas of Heart Disease and Stroke, Geneva, WHO, September
2004, p.26. |
| xxii |
World Health Organization. The WHO Stroke Surveillance System.
Accessed March 2005 at: www.who.int/ncd_surveillance/steps/stroke/en/flyerStroke2.pdf. |
| xxiii |
American Heart Association. Stroke awareness low among women,
especially minorities. Accessed March 2005 at: www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=3029541. |
| xxiv |
Ibid. |
| xxv |
British Heart Foundation Statistics Website. CVD death rates
in Europe. Accessed March 2005 at: www.heartstats.org/datapage.asp?id=757. |
| xxvi |
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada. General Info-Stroke Statistics.
Accessed March 2005 at: www.heartandstroke.ca (click
on ‘Stroke’,
then ‘General Info). |