Elsevier

Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases

Volume 77, March–April 2023, Pages 4-13
Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases

Cardiology and lifestyle medicine

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pcad.2023.04.004Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Poor lifestyle habits, such as physical inactivity and poor diets, are highly prevalent within society and even more so among patients with chronic disease. The need to stem poor lifestyle habits has led to the development of a new field of Lifestyle Medicine, whose mission is to prevent, treat, and even reverse chronic diseases through lifestyle interventions. Three fields within Cardiology relate to this mission: Cardiac Rehabilitation, Preventive Cardiology, and Behavioral Cardiology. Each of these three fields have contributed substantially to the reduction of cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality. The historic contributions of these three cardiac fields are reviewed as well as the challenges each of these fields has faced in optimizing the application of lifestyle medicine practices. A shared agenda between Cardiology and the American College of Lifestyle Medicine could further the utilization of behavioral interventions. This review suggests seven steps that could be shared by these organizations and other medical societies. First, there is a need to develop and promulgate the assessment of lifestyle factors as “vital signs” during patient visits. Second, developing a strong partnership between the fields of Cardiology and Physiatry could improve important aspects of cardiac care, including a potential redesign of cardiac stress testing. Third, behavioral evaluations should be optimized at patients' entrée points into medical care since these may be considered “windows of opportunity”. Fourth, there is a need to broaden cardiac rehabilitation into inexpensive programs and make this program eligible for patients with risk factors but no known CVD. Fifth, lifestyle medicine education should be integrated into the core competencies for relevant specialties. Sixth, there is a need for inter-societal advocacy to promote lifestyle medicine practices. Seventh, the well-being effects of healthy lifestyle behaviors, such as their impact on one's sense of vitality, should be emphasized.

Abbreviations

ACLM
American College of Lifestyle Medicine
AHA
American Heart Association
CR
Cardiac rehabilitation
CAD
coronary artery disease
CVD
cardiovascular disease
MI
myocardial infarction
PA
physical activity

Keywords

Lifestyle medicine
Behavioral cardiology
Cardiac rehabilitation
Preventive cardiology

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