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Cardiologist here, can confirm. We’ve long been seeing these promising trends, in the US, Europe, and elsewhere. I would say the greatest reason for this are 1- advances in percutaneous interventions (which is as much about having new tools to fix acute MIs, such as more effective stents, as much as logistically making these tools + the skilled physicians to operate them widely available in any place at any time), 2- relatively cheap & highly effective cardiac medications, & 3- the hugely successful anti-smoking campaign. Diet/exercise changes of course may be some contributors but they’re clearly not being widely followed.
Here’s the original article in JACC fyi—
https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/S0735-1097%2823%2901585-1 |