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Health & Wellness

Premature heart disease can be prevented

“We are a community under pressure, and it is time we reclaim the power over our own lifelines.”

Photographer: Dann Tardif

I am looking at you.

Not the public. Not a demographic. I am looking at you, sitting at your kitchen table, watching your father struggle with the stairs, or noticing your mother quietly refill a prescription for high blood pressure that never seems to get lower.

You feel it, don’t you? That heavy, silent anxiety that hangs over our Sunday dinners. We talk about everything: politics, church, the kids, but we rarely talk about the fact that our hearts are under siege.

The latest data from Heart & Stroke is finally out, and it confirms what our lived experience has told us for years: the system is failing us, but we cannot afford to fail ourselves. Across this country, more than six million people are living with heart disease or stroke. That is a crowded stadium of brothers, sisters, and elders whose lives are being cut short or diminished.

Here is why you need to internalize right now; while medical advances have dropped the overall death rate by 80% over the last seventy years, the number of us living with these conditions is actually climbing, and if you think this is an equal opportunity crisis, think again. The report explicitly states that African Caribbean Canadians and other racialized groups face a disproportionate burden.

Why? Our health is at the intersection of race, class, and systemic constraint. When the report mentions that nine in 10 people in Canada have at least one modifiable risk factor, we have to ask: why is it harder for us to modify them?

Stress is a silent killer, and nearly one in four adults report that their days are extremely stressful. For a Caribbean senior navigating a system not built for them, or an African Caribbean father working two jobs to keep up with inflation, stress is a structural reality, but here is where we take our power back.

The sources reveal a staggering truth: almost 80% of premature heart disease and stroke can be prevented. Read that again. Eighty percent. We have the agency to change the narrative from one of inevitable decline to one of strategic survival.

Currently, 8.2 million adults in this country are living with high blood pressure. It is the number one risk for stroke. Yet only half of us even know our own risk. We are playing a high-stakes game with our eyes closed.

We cannot wait for the government to fix the inequities of settler colonialism or systemic neglect before we act. We must use our collective intelligence to protect our pulse.

Demand clarity

If you have a family history, stop waiting for the right time to talk to a doctor. Demand a screen for high blood pressure, cholesterol, and diabetes.

Break the cycle

We pass down habits. If nearly eight in 10 of us are not eating enough fruits and vegetables, we have to ask who is making our food expensive and why.

Hold the line

Use the Heart & Stroke Risk Screen tool. It’s free. It’s a weapon in your arsenal.

This is about community preservation. This is about making sure our children don’t grow up in a world where their hearts are expected to fail. We are a people of strength, dignity, and agency. It is time we applied that same strategic brilliance to the blood flowing through our veins. Share this. Our families are counting on us to lead.

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Written By

We, as humans are guaranteed certain things in life: stressors, taxes, bills and death are the first thoughts that pop to mind. It is not uncommon that many people find a hard time dealing with these daily life stressors, and at times will find themselves losing control over their lives. Simone Jennifer Smith’s great passion is using the gifts that have been given to her, to help educate her clients on how to live meaningful lives. The Hear to Help Team consists of powerfully motivated individuals, who like Simone, see that there is a need in this world; a need for real connection. As the founder and Director of Hear 2 Help, Simone leads a team that goes out into the community day to day, servicing families with their educational, legal and mental health needs.Her dedication shows in her Toronto Caribbean newspaper articles, and in her role as a host on the TCN TV Network.

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