Step into summer in the best shape of your life with these reports from Harvard Medical School.
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Warmer weather is on the way and it's not too late to get in shape for the summer. These 3 reports can help you enjoy outdoor activities in the best shape of your life:

7 steps to be a star in heart health, from the Harvard Heart Letter

Want to be an American Ideal? You can star in this reality production (also known as daily life) by following the seven steps the American Heart Association (AHA) uses to define “ideal heart health.” Making all seven part of your life can help you protect yourself from heart disease or stroke. But even following just one or two of the steps significantly reduces the chances of having heart disease, reports the April 2010 issue of the Harvard Heart Letter.

You qualify as someone with ideal heart health if you have not been diagnosed with cardiovascular disease and

  1. have never smoked or quit more than a year ago
  2. maintain a healthy body weight (a body mass index under 25)
  3. spend at least 150 minutes a week doing moderate physical activity or 75 minutes a week doing vigorous activity
  4. eat a healthy diet
  5. keep your total cholesterol under 200 mg/dL
  6. keep your blood pressure under 120/80
  7. keep your fasting blood sugar under 100 mg/dL.

The Simple 7 are part of the AHA’s strategy to meet its 2020 goal: “to improve the cardiovascular health of all Americans by 20% while reducing deaths from cardiovascular diseases and stroke by 20%.” The beauty of this approach is that its benefits extend far beyond the heart and arteries. It also works to fight other diseases that are largely caused by poor lifestyle choices—type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, and some types of cancer, to name just a few.

The Harvard Heart Letter points readers to the AHA’s online heart health resource, called My Life Check (www.heart.org/MyLifeCheck). It includes a questionnaire that lets you know where you are on the spectrum for each of the seven goals and tools to help you develop a plan to improve your health and track your progress.

Read full-length article: "American Ideal"

Also in this issue of the Harvard Heart Letter

  • April 2010 references and further reading
  • American Ideal
  • Exercise stress test
  • A personal approach to heart failure
  • Taming a killer
  • Heart Beat: Dual protection
  • Trial Watch
  • In Brief
  • Ask the doctor: Can I take PreserVision for my eyes even though I take warfarin?
  • Ask the doctor: Can allergies cause high blood pressure?
  • Ask the doctor: Is it okay to travel to a high altitude with high blood pressure?

More Harvard Health News »


About Harvard Health Publications

Harvard Health Publications publishes four monthly newsletters--Harvard Health Letter, Harvard Women's Health Watch, Harvard Men's Health Watch, and Harvard Heart Letter--as well as more than 50 special health reports and books drawing on the expertise of the 8,000 faculty physicians at Harvard Medical School and its world-famous affiliated hospitals.