Health & Fitness
7 min read
Global CV Society Demands Action on Environmental Threats to Heart Health
American College of Cardiology
January 20, 2026•2 days ago

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Major cardiovascular societies issued a joint statement highlighting environmental stressors as significant causes of cardiovascular disease. The statement identifies air pollution, climate change, and noise pollution as key threats, urging coordinated action. It calls for global policy changes, increased research, public awareness, sustainable healthcare, and climate-resilient health systems to mitigate these preventable risks.
A joint statement released by the ACC, European Society of Cardiology (ESC), American Heart Association (AHA) and World Heart Federation (WHF) calls for urgent action to address environmental stressors as major, yet preventable, causes of cardiovascular disease.
The statement focuses on key environmental stressors, including noise/light pollution, climate change, chemical pollution, soil pollution, and air and water pollution, and outlines six overarching priority areas where a unified approach to prevention and policy can drive change.
According to the societies, "the interplay among these stressors amplifies overall cardiovascular risk and underscores the need for integrated exposome-based prevention strategies" focused on:
Global advocacy and policy alignment that prioritizes environmental effects on cardiovascular health
Investment in research on the impacts of environmental risk factors to inform targeted action
Education and increased awareness among health care professionals and the public on environmental risk factors.
Urban planning and policies promoting clean transport, green space and noise control.
Sustainable health care to reduce emissions and pollution within medical systems.
Climate-resilient health systems to protect vulnerable populations.
The authors explain that immediate, coordinated and courageous actions are needed by policymakers, regulatory agencies, community groups, health care organizations and industry partners to reduce personal and societal environmental risk factor exposure, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, or in places "where the probability of sudden catastrophic and cascading events is much more likely."
Specifically, the statement calls on policymakers to address "the root causes of environmental stressors" and adopt stricter air quality and noise standards, phase out fossil fuels and regulate toxic chemicals. It also highlights several health system adaptation and resilience measures, including implementation of public awareness campaigns, health care workforce training and retention strategies, data sharing and interoperability, dedicated funding for health system adaptation and crisis response, investment in telemedicine and integrated care models, and more.
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