American Heart Association

American Heart Association

Wellness and Fitness Services

Dallas, Texas 907,977 followers

Advancing health and hope for everyone, everywhere. Our future is about improving yours.

About us

Our mission : To be a relentless force for a world of longer, healthier lives. As the nation's oldest and largest voluntary health organization. Our purpose is to help Americans live heart healthy and prevent America's No. 1 and No. 5 killers, heart disease and stroke. We are advocates of good health and promoters of positive behaviors, nutritious eating habits and healthy lifestyles. We also fund cutting-edge research and professional education programs. We promise to have an extraordinary impact on your life by empowering you and your loved ones to save lives, live healthier and enjoy more peace of mind about cardiovascular health. 2024 Impact Goal: Every person deserves the opportunity for a full, healthy life. As champions for health equity, by 2024, the American Heart Association will advance cardiovascular health for all, including identifying and removing barriers to health care access and quality. Join our communities: Facebook: http://facebook.com/AmericanHeart Twitter: http://twitter.com/American_Heart YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/American_Heart Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/americanheart Instagram: http://instagram.com/american_heart Blog: http://blog.heart.org Heart News: http://twitter.com/heartnews ASA Facebook: http://facebook.com/AmericanStroke ASA Twitter: http://twitter.com/American_Stroke Science News Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ahasciencenews Science News Twitter: https://www.facebook.com/AHACPR CPR Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AHACPR CPR Twitter: http://twitter.com/heartCPR Go Red For Women Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/goredforwomen Go Red For Women Twitter: http://twitter.com/goredforwomen Advocacy Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/yourethecure Advocacy Twitter: http://twitter.com/AmHeartAdvocacy

Website
http://www.heart.org
Industry
Wellness and Fitness Services
Company size
1,001-5,000 employees
Headquarters
Dallas, Texas
Type
Nonprofit
Founded
1924
Specialties
cardiovascular disease, heart disease, stroke, Go Red For Women, Together To End Stroke, Power To End Stroke, Family Health Challenge, Heart Walk, Jump Rope For Heart, Hoops For Heart, Teaching Gardens, CPR, You're the Cure, nonprofit, healthy living, nutrition, and heart.org

Locations

Employees at American Heart Association

Updates

  • View organization page for American Heart Association, graphic

    907,977 followers

    "I found my place and purpose outside of the military at the American Heart Association," said Darje Bennett, our Project Coordinator for Healthcare Business Solutions in ECC Science and Product Development. As we celebrate #IndependenceDay within #TheAHALife, we honor freedom, pride, and unity, while highlighting the veterans among us, like Darje Bennett and our entire Military & Veterans Employee Resource Group. We are proud to offer the community, support, flexibility, and structure needed for veterans as they transition from one phase of life to the next through our commitment to meeting people where they are. Listen to Darje's story as she shares how the Association was the perfect place to transition into the workforce not only as a veteran but as a new mom, too. #HiringHeroes

  • View organization page for American Heart Association, graphic

    907,977 followers

    "I was one of those people that thought nothing could happen to me,” said Craig Warren of Williamson, West Virginia. “I had a stroke, had a heart attack, had a kidney transplant.“ To help him monitor his health, Craig enrolled in the Williamson Health and Wellness Center’s community health worker program a decade ago. Community health workers visit neighbors like Craig to check blood pressure and blood glucose readings and help them manage their medications. They also organize walking groups and free community yoga classes, distribute boxes of heart-healthy foods and show residents how to cook them. They are not medical professionals, but work closely with them. In the coal-mining town of Williamson, the estimated life expectancy is 67.2 years, 10 years less than the national average. Like many rural communities, it’s working to overcome the health challenges brought on by poverty, lack of health insurance, food insecurity and a shortage of hospitals and health care professionals. "We have to keep up the preventive work so they don't have to see a specialist. We have no specialists here," said Melissa Justice, a nurse who coordinates Williamson’s community health worker program. The people enrolled in the program have made steady progress, particularly in blood pressure control. In 2019, 65% of patients had blood pressure under control. Now, about 77% of patients maintain blood pressure within the normal range. "I'm one of the lucky ones,” Craig says. “I'm lucky to be alive."

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  • View organization page for American Heart Association, graphic

    907,977 followers

    Like many people in rural West Virginia, Sabrina Ford grew up on beans cooked with lard and cornbread loaded with sugar, often with a side of fried potatoes cooked in bacon grease. But years of eating high-fat, fried and sugary foods have resulted in another family tradition: heart disease and other chronic illnesses. As the director of nursing at Rainelle Medical Center, the only clinic serving the town's roughly 1,170 residents, Sabrina worries that if she doesn't change the unhealthy situation, her grandchildren will be next. "I don't want that for them," she said, nor does she want to miss seeing them grow up. "I want to be around for a long time. I want to see them graduate high school." Rural Americans – particularly those in Appalachia – face some of the highest rates of heart disease and chronic illness in the nation. West Virginia ranks at or near the top for rates of cardiovascular disease and diabetes, along with cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure, smoking and obesity. Sabrina and her daughter, Sarah Ward, a diabetes specialist at the medical center, are working to break the stranglehold of chronic illness with Wellness Works, a program that helps others create and maintain a healthier lifestyle. In the region they serve, blood pressure, cholesterol and blood glucose levels have all decreased. "We use our influence as health care professionals to display how being active, cooking healthy meals, shopping for better choices at the grocery store and growing your own food can be possible, even with the barriers we all face," Sarah said. “I'm dieting, watching what I eat. I've lost 60 pounds,” Sabrina said. “I want to pass it down to my grandchildren that we practice good healthy habits."

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