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Why Heart Disease Still Wins: Inside the TIME100 Health Summit’s Blueprint to Break America’s Deadliest Habit

Last updated: February 20, 2026 6:15 am
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Why Heart Disease Still Wins: Inside the TIME100 Health Summit’s Blueprint to Break America’s Deadliest Habit
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America already owns the science to prevent most heart disease. What it lacks is the social science to make people use it—an urgent gap the TIME100 Health panel vowed to close last night.

The 1945 Warning the U.S. Still Ignores

When President Franklin Roosevelt died of untreated hypertension in 1945, the public thought his passing was sudden. Physician notes later revealed a decade of sky-high blood pressure never reined in. Fast-forward 81 years and the same lethal pattern repeats: 47 percent of U.S. adults have hypertension, yet only one in four keeps it under control, according to the CDC.

“None of us would sit on that today,” Northwestern professor Dr. Sadiya Khan told the TIME100 Health Impact Dinner. “We can add years—decades—of life by treating blood pressure. But we still don’t do it.”

From Molecules to Mindsets: Pharma’s New playbook

Khan shared the stage with Victor Bultó, president of Novartis U.S.—a 2026 TIME100 Health listee—who admitted an uncomfortable truth: the blockbuster drugs already exist. What’s missing is human follow-through.

“We had to shift from being just a medical-science company to being a social-science company,” Bultó said, outlining a strategy that now tracks why patients skip pills, ignore gym prescriptions, and discount long-term risk for short-term dopamine hits.

The Pregnancy Blind Spot

While men’s heart risk is screened starting in middle age, women’s first warning often arrives in the delivery room. Khan, who herself battled gestational diabetes, spotlighted how preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, and pregnancy hypertension double a woman’s lifetime cardiovascular risk—yet discharge paperwork rarely mentions the link.

“Early markers are red flags, not destiny,” Khan argued. “If we act when women are 25 instead of 55, we can rewrite the curve.”

What Actually Moves the Needle: Huffington’s “Big Five”

Thrive Global founder Arianna Huffington pressed the panel to codify behavior. Her non-negotiables:

  • Sleep: seven to nine hours cuts heart-attack odds 24 percent
  • Stress: cortisol narrows arteries within minutes; unmanaged stress rivals smoking
  • Food: ultra-processed meals increase risk 12 percent per daily serving
  • Exercise: 150 weekly minutes can negate genetic predisposition
  • Connection: loneliness raises blood pressure as surely as salt

“Medicines work, but daily micro-decisions decide whether pills sit in the bottle or in the body,” Huffington said.

The Profit Paradox

Kumar challenged Bultó on optics: why should a pharma giant push prevention if it throttles demand for its own cardiac drugs? Bultó answered with real-world math: every prevented stroke saves the U.S. health system $120,000 in direct costs. “Healthier patients stay in the workforce, buy houses, build families—markets that buy everything else we make,” he said, citing internal Novartis projections shared with investors last quarter.

Next-Gen Tactics Announced

Before dessert arrived, three commitments hit the record:

  1. Novartis will fund a $50 million digital-nudge trial that texts personalized risk scores to 200,000 Americans with uncontrolled hypertension.
  2. Khan’s lab rolls out a free micro-clinic toolkit for OB-GYN offices to flag postpartum cardio risks within the six-week checkup.
  3. Thrive Global and TIME will co-publish an open-source Behavior Rx playbook—a menu of sleep, food, stress, and social scripts clinicians can prescribe like statins.

What Success Looks Like by 2030

Panelists signed an informal pledge to cut U.S. heart-disease deaths 25 percent this decade. To get there, they will track one metric rarely seen on pharma dashboards: medication adherence plus lifestyle adherence. If either number stalls, intervention changes within 90 days, not at the next quarterly earnings call.

The Bottom Line

The science is no longer the choke point; the choke point is us. Until dopamine loses its duel with data, heart disease will keep winning. The TIME100 Health dinner ended with a clear ultimatum: treat behavior as the new vital sign—or keep autopsying fully treatable futures.

Stay ahead of every breakthrough in health policy, tech, and behavior science—bookmark onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, most authoritative takes on the news that shapes your life.

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