Million Hearts focuses on improving aspirin use, blood pressure,
cholesterol control and tobacco prevention
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), with several key
initial partners, today launched Million Hearts, an initiative that aims
to prevent 1 million heart attacks and strokes over the next five years.
Currently, cardiovascular disease costs $444 billion every year in
medical costs and lost productivity in Americans. Building on work
already underway thanks to the Affordable Care Act, Million Hearts will
help improve Americans’ health and increase productivity.
Million Hearts is focused on two goals:
- Empowering Americans to make healthy choices such as preventing
tobacco use and reducing sodium and trans fat consumption. This can
reduce the number of people who need medical treatment such as blood
pressure or cholesterol medications to prevent heart attacks and
strokes.
- Improving care for people who do need treatment by encouraging
a targeted focus on the “ABCS” – Aspirin
for people at risk, Blood pressure
control, Cholesterol management and Smoking
cessation – which address the major risk factors for cardiovascular
disease and can help to prevent heart attacks and strokes.
“Heart disease causes 1 of every 3 American deaths and constitutes 17
percent of overall national health spending,” said HHS Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius. “By enlisting partners from across the health sector,
Million Hearts will create a national focus on combating heart disease.”
By empowering Americans to make healthy choices and improving care,
Million Hearts strives to achieve the following specific goals:
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Indicator |
| Baseline |
| 2017 goal |
|
Aspirin use for people at high risk
|
|
47%
|
|
65%
|
|
Blood pressure control
|
|
46%
|
|
65%
|
|
Effective treatment of high cholesterol (LDL-C)
|
|
33%
|
|
65%
|
|
Smoking prevalence
|
|
19%
|
|
17%
|
|
Sodium intake (average)
|
|
3.5g/day
|
|
20% reduction
|
|
Artificial trans fat consumption (average)
|
|
1% of calories/day
|
|
50% reduction
|
|
| |
| |
“Through this public-private partnership, Million Hearts focuses on the
areas that will save the most lives. It leverages and aligns current
investments and is a great example of getting more health value from our
existing health investments,” said Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention Director Thomas R. Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. “If we succeed in
achieving our Million Hearts goals, 10 million more Americans with high
blood pressure will have it under control, 20 million more Americans
with high cholesterol will have it under control, and 4 million fewer
Americans will smoke by 2017.”

“The treatment of heart disease and stroke account for about $1 of every
$6 spent on health care in this country,” said Donald Berwick, M.D.,
M.P.P., administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS). “By shifting our focus from paying for how much care is provided
to how to get the best health for Americans and putting more tools into
the hands of health care providers and patients, CMS can help prevent
strokes, heart attacks and avoidable human suffering.”
Several partners from the private sector will work to achieve the
Million Hearts goals by:
- Improving Americans’ diets, reducing tobacco use, and improving
medication adherence through community innovations.
Specifically,
these private sector initiatives include:
- The American Heart Association will help monitor progress
of the initiative’s goals and provide consumers with access to
their heart health management tools, including Heart 360, My Life
Check, and the Heart Attack Risk Calculator.
- Walgreens will engage its more than 26,000 health care
providers to support the Million Hearts initiative’s prevention
goal by providing blood pressure testing at no charge in
consultation with a Walgreens pharmacist or Take Care Clinic Nurse
Practitioner.
- The Y is aiming to expand coverage of the Y’s Diabetes
Prevention Program as well as the successful National Diabetes
Prevention Program and CDC’s Healthy Communities Program to better
address risks for diabetes, heart attacks, and stroke.
- America’s Health Insurance Plans and its members will
amplify their ongoing commitment to reduce cardiovascular disease,
which includes community-based collaborations to reduce the burden
of obesity and other risk factors for heart disease
(UnitedHealthcare), beneficiary fitness programs (WellPoint),
initiatives to reduce ethnic and racial disparities in
cardiovascular health (Aetna) and programs to better manage
chronic disease (Cigna).
- The American Pharmacists’ Association and the American
Pharmacists’ Association Foundationwill encourage its more
than 62,000 members to engage in the Million Hearts Campaign by
raising awareness with their patients and their communities.
- The National Alliance of State Pharmacy Associations and the
Alliance for Patient Medication Safety will encourage state
pharmacy associations and their members to engage in the Million
Hearts Campaign throughout the year with many activities planned
for American Pharmacists Month in October and beyond.
- The National Community Pharmacists Association will
encourage all 23,000 independent community pharmacies to become
involved in the Initiative and continue to raise awareness through
their publications and social media outlets.
Participation and commitment from private partners are expected to
grow in the coming months; major national associations like the
American Medical Association and American Nurses Association have
already committed their constituencies to this important work.
In
addition, HHS will target more than $200 million in new and
refocused investments to achieve the goals of Million Hearts:

-
Today, CDC is announcing $40 million for chronic disease
prevention programs to health departments across the country.
- The Food and Drug Administration and the Food Safety and
Inspection Service are launching efforts to identify opportunities
to reduce sodium in food in order to put more control into
consumers’ hands.
-
CDC is announcing a $2 millionPharmacy Outreach Project to team
up with pharmacists to provide additional advice and support to
patients diagnosed with high blood pressure.
-
CMS is announcing $85 million in Medicaid Incentives for
Prevention of Chronic Diseases grants awarded to 10 states. These
awards support prevention programs for Medicaid beneficiaries of
all ages.
-
CDC is announcing $4.2 million in funds to seven national networks
of community-based organizations to support, disseminate and
amplify the reach of the Community Transformation Grant program.
Later this month, CDC will announce another $100 million in grants
to communities across the country focused on reducing smoking,
improving nutrition, and promoting blood pressure control.
- The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration will
align all available resources to support improved outreach and
provision of comprehensive health care to people with mental and
substance use disorders.
HHS will also achieve the goals of Million Hearts by:
- Enhancing focus on cardiovascular disease prevention
-
Federal agencies and private sector partners will focus and align
measurement strategies which will both improve ABCS care and
simplifying reporting for providers. For example, the Physician
Quality Reporting System, which provides bonus payments, and
in the future, payment reductions, based on the reporting of
quality information by eligible professionals, CMS plans to
enhance its focus on the ABCS.
-
Beginning in 2012, HRSA will require all community health centers
to report annually on the ABCS measures to track and improve
performance, including new measures for 2012 for aspirin use and
cholesterol screening. These efforts will help to improve ABCS
care for more than 20 million patients.
- Focusing HIT efforts to prevent heart attacks and strokes
-
Ongoing HIT improvements will increase focus on cardiovascular
prevention and give providers improved tools for their delivery of
lifesaving ABCS care. Regional extension centers, which reach
nearly 100,000 primary care doctors, and Beacon Communities will
reach more than 100 million patients within the next few years.
- Improving the delivery of ABCS care through clinical innovations,
including:
- Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs). A network of 53
Medicare-funded organizations nationwide to improve healthcare
quality at the community level, QIOs will work with physician
offices, clinics and other providers to create Learning & Action
Networks focused on achieving the elements of ABCS as part of each
QIO’s tasks and goals.
- Learning from Local Innovators (Healthcare Innovations
Exchange).The HHS Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality’s Healthcare Innovations Exchange supports efforts to
identify and disseminate innovative efforts to improve health care
led by local communities and leaders.
For further information on the public and private support of the Million
Hearts initiative, please visit: http://millionhearts.hhs.gov/about-mh.shtml

For more information about the Million Hearts initiative and to access
cardiovascular disease risk assessment tools visit http://millionhearts.hhs.gov.
Million Hearts is a trademark of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
Note: All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other press materials are
available at http://www.hhs.gov/news.

HHS Press Office
202-690-6343
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services