09/02/2025 / By Cassie B.
Approximately every 34 seconds, heart disease claims another American life. But what if the real killer isn’t just cholesterol or high blood pressure… what if it’s depression, anxiety, or PTSD? A bombshell review in The Lancet Regional Health-Europe confirms what natural health advocates have warned for years: mental health disorders don’t just wreck your mind; they destroy your heart.
People with schizophrenia face a 95 percent higher risk of heart disease. Depression spikes cardiovascular danger by 72 percent. Even mild anxiety raises the odds by 41 percent. And the worst part? Those with serious mental health conditions die 10 to 20 years earlier — not from suicide or overdoses, but from heart attacks and strokes.
Yet the medical system still treats the brain and heart as separate entities. Cardiologists ignore mental health, psychiatrists overlook heart risks, and patients fall through the cracks. This isn’t just negligence; it’s a deadly disparity that’s costing lives.
The connection is just as much biological as it is behavioral. Chronic stress from depression, PTSD, or bipolar disorder triggers systemic inflammation, spikes blood pressure, and disrupts metabolism. Meanwhile, heart disease itself can worsen mental health, creating a feedback loop of decline.
“More than 40% of those with cardiovascular disease also have a mental health condition,” says Dr. Viola Vaccarino, lead author of the Emory University report. The numbers are staggering:
Yet despite these risks, people with mental health disorders receive fewer screenings, worse cardiac care, and less follow-up than the general population. In universal healthcare systems, they’re still left behind. In the U.S., 54 percent of those needing mental health treatment get none at all.
Many psychiatric medications, such as antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, and even some antidepressants, worsen metabolic health, leading to weight gain, diabetes, and high cholesterol. Yet doctors rarely warn patients of these risks.
Standard mental health treatments do sometimes help to decrease the cardiovascular risk, but results vary, the study notes. Exercise, however, is a game-changer, matching antidepressants for depression relief while directly improving heart health. Yet how many psychiatrists prescribe a gym membership instead of a pill?
The medical system may be failing, but you don’t have to. Holistic strategies — nutrition, exercise, detoxification, and stress reduction — protect both your brain and heart far better than pharmaceuticals.
The study’s authors call for integrated care teams made up of doctors, social workers, and nurses working together to address mental and physical health. But with a system this broken, waiting for reform could be fatal.
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Anxiety, cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular health, depression, health science, heart disease, heart health, mental health, Mind, mind body science, PTSD, real investigations, research, truth
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