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Actions for Governors

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Why should a governor promote heart–healthy and stroke–free communities?

Governors hold an important and valuable position for protecting the health of the people in their state. This document provides a range of actions you can take to promote heart–healthy and stroke–free communities, which revolve around five central themes:

The choice is yours. The time to act to address heart disease and stroke is now.

Demonstrate leadership

  • Be a role model: display educational materials and establish worksite policies to support heart health in your office. Share your heart–healthy activities with the media (e.g., getting your blood pressure checked, using the stairs). If you or a family member has cardiovascular disease, share your story.1
     
  • Be an advocate for people in your state to adopt a heart–healthy lifestyle. Sign a resolution for your state to observe heart month and stroke month with related activities.1
     
  • Be a champion: create a task force or working group on heart disease and stroke.1
     
  • Publicly support a statewide quitline to provide all smokers with access to the support and latest information to help them quit.2
     
  • Host awareness campaigns about the
    * Signs and symptoms of heart attacks and stroke.2
    * Urgency of calling 9–1–1 when these signs and symptoms first appear.2
    * Prevention of risk factors, such as physical inactivity and smoking.3
     
  • Actively support mass media efforts to prevent tobacco use.3

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Implement policies and incentives to make healthy choices the easy choices

  • Provide recognition awards to employers in your state that have implemented worksite health promotion programs. Elements of such programs include
    * Placing signs by elevators that encourage people to use the stairs.3
    * Promoting healthy food options in cafeterias and vending machines.2
    * Incorporate preventive services into health plans.2
    * Providing services such as screening and treatment for high blood pressure, high
    cholesterol, smoking, and high blood glucose.2
    * Establish smoke–free work sites.3
    * Ensure coverage for prescription drugs used to prevent heart disease and stroke.2
     
  • Promote coordinated school health programs, which can prevent risk behaviors that contribute to heart disease and stroke by
    * Maintaining or adopting enhanced physical education classes.3
    * Serving and promoting heart–healthy food in cafeterias and vending machines.2
    * Implementing smoke–free schools and campuses.3
    * Prohibiting withholding of recess as punishment.1
     
  • Recognize localities that update zoning codes to encourage high–density and mixed land use, thereby increasing opportunities for walking and biking.2
     
  • Create opportunities for physical activity, such as
    * Walking and biking trails coupled with education efforts.3
    * Policies that encourage use of mass transit, walking, and biking.2
    * Walk–to–school initiatives.2
     
  • Assess the value of increasing excise taxes on tobacco products in your state.3
     
  • Set an example by establishing a tobacco–free policy in public buildings, including schools and campuses. Support other tobacco–free policies such as prohibiting smoking in all enclosed workplaces, public places, government buildings, restaurants, bars, and gaming facilities.3
     
  • Designate use of Master Settlement Agreement funds or other dollars for comprehensive tobacco prevention programs. Target these programs to vulnerable populations.1

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Promote coverage for and use of preventive health services

  • Work with insurers in your state to develop health benefits packages that include preventive services and incentives for preventing cardiovascular disease.2
     
  • Work with small businesses and insurers to develop policies that allow small business groups to buy into group health plans, as self–insured organizations do.1
     
  • Assess the status of or make changes to your Medicaid program to promote reimbursement for preventive services for cardiovascular disease that emphasize quality, cost–effective medical care.2
     
  • Work with your insurance commissioner or department to monitor health insurance benefits and ensure that they include services to prevent cardiovascular disease.1
     
  • Include heart disease and stroke as part of minority health initiatives and partner with safety–net providers (e.g., community health centers, migrant health clinics).1

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Implement life–saving improvements in health services and medical response

  • Ensure that all communities in your state have access to 9–1–1. Establish wireless, enhanced 9–1–1 (WE9–1–1), which allows an emergency call center to capture the precise location of a caller.2
     
  • Ensure that your state health care system treats stroke as a true medical emergency and that everyone in your state has access to a coordinated system of stroke care.2
     
  • Encourage primary care settings to enhance patient care management for high blood pressure, cholesterol, and heart disease, using such approaches as the Chronic Care Model.2

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Use your authority to strengthen state efforts to address heart disease and stroke

  • Support health impact studies and economic evaluations related to proposed legislation affecting issues such as land use and transportation.1
     
  • Support policies to make heart attacks and acute strokes reportable conditions so that the state health department can use these data to promote and evaluate improvements in emergency response and hospital care.1
     
  • Support efforts by your state health and education departments to address heart disease and stroke and their risk factors.1
     
  • Support data collection efforts and the sharing of data to document progress in preventing heart disease and stroke and their risk factors. Examples of data sources include the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS), the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), and the Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS).1

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To view some examples of policies that promote heart–healthy and stroke–free communities, click HERE.

What the Symbols Mean

The actions in this document are divided into three categories, which are indicated by the number following each action.

1 Approaches that will bring visibility and support to the issues of heart disease and stroke.
2  Interventions found be several studies or scientific reviews to support the cardiovascular health.
3  Interventions recommended by CDC's Guide to Community Preventive Services or clinical guidelines.

References for level 2 and level 3 actions are listed on the link titled References above. References for level 2  include pre/post, quasi–experimental, and experimental studies.

 

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Go to Governors Examples |

 

Date last reviewed: 05/12/2006
Content source: Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

 
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