Although men ARE more likely to suffer heart attacks, women are more likely to die within a year from having a heart attack.
Women Face Higher Heart Attack Death Risk Than Men
Here's a medical reality that catches most people off guard: women who suffer heart attacks are significantly more likely to die from them than men, despite men having higher heart attack rates overall. It's not just a small difference—women face a 20% increased risk of death or heart failure within five years after their first severe heart attack.
The numbers tell a stark story. At the 30-day mark after a heart attack, 11.8% of women have died compared to just 4.6% of men. That's more than double the mortality rate. Fast forward five years, and 32% of women have died versus only 17% of men.
Why the Deadly Gap?
The disparity isn't about biology alone—it's a perfect storm of medical, social, and systemic factors. Treatment delays play a massive role. Women wait an average of 95 minutes for treatment after arriving at the hospital, compared to 80 minutes for men. Those 15 minutes can mean the difference between life and death when heart muscle is dying.
Women are also less likely to receive critical interventions in the first place. Studies across six countries found that hospitalized women receive:
- Fewer cardiac catheterizations
- Less frequent PCI (percutaneous coronary intervention)
- Lower rates of CABG (bypass surgery)
Part of the problem is that heart attacks look different in women. While men typically experience the Hollywood version—crushing chest pain, left arm numbness—women often have subtler symptoms like fatigue, nausea, back pain, or shortness of breath. These "atypical" symptoms (which are only atypical because medicine was built around male bodies) lead to misdiagnosis and delays.
The Doctor Gender Factor
Here's where it gets even more interesting: who treats you matters. Research published in PNAS found that women treated by male physicians have higher mortality rates than women treated by female physicians. The gender concordance effect is real—when patient and physician share the same gender, survival rates improve.
Women also tend to be older when they have their first heart attack and carry more comorbidities like diabetes, making treatment more complex. But age and health history don't fully explain the gap—systemic bias in how cardiac symptoms are recognized and treated plays a crucial role.
A Global Problem
This isn't just an American issue. A Yale-led study examining over 700,000 patients across 29 countries found the gender mortality gap exists worldwide. From Europe to Asia to the Americas, women consistently fare worse after heart attacks.
The good news? Awareness is growing. Medical schools now teach the differences in how heart disease presents across genders. Emergency protocols are being updated. Research is finally including women in cardiac studies at meaningful rates. But we're still fighting decades of medical knowledge built primarily from studying men.
So yes, men have more heart attacks—but women pay a higher price when they do. Recognizing symptoms early, advocating for prompt treatment, and ensuring equal access to interventions can help close this deadly gap.