Quick Fact: By 2026, ischaemic heart disease still tops the global death charts, claiming nearly 9 million lives a year—16% of all deaths worldwide. China alone accounts for the highest raw numbers.
Geographic Context
Once labeled a “rich-country problem,” ischaemic heart disease now cuts across every income tier. Fast urbanization, desk-bound jobs, and diets heavy on processed foods and calories have spread it everywhere. The steepest toll shows up in Eastern Europe, South Asia, and chunks of East Asia—places where economies raced ahead of public-health safeguards.
Key Details
| Rank | Country | Annual CAD Deaths (est. 2026) | Key Risk Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | China | 1.8 million | Aging population; high salt and oil intake |
| 2 | India | 1.2 million | Urbanization; rising obesity in youth |
| 3 | Russia | 550,000 | Post-Soviet diet shift; high alcohol use |
| 4 | United States | 500,000 | Chronic stress; processed food reliance |
| 5 | Indonesia | 420,000 | Dietary shift from rice to fried foods |
Globally, about 18.2 million adults 20 and older have CAD in 2026. Roughly 82% of those deaths hit people 65+. Men tend to suffer their first heart attack around 65, women closer to 72. Yet women face higher odds of dying in the weeks after an attack—often because symptoms get missed or treatment is delayed.
Interesting Background
In a 2024 follow-up to the 2017 Lancet study, fewer than 2% of Tsimane adults over 75 showed any coronary artery buildup—despite almost no access to modern medicine. Their secret? A diet of plantains, wild game, and fish, plus daily 10,000-step treks through dense jungle. Meanwhile, the so-called “French Paradox” has lost some of its shine. Moderate red-wine drinking used to get most of the credit, but newer 2025 data fingers portion control and a culture built around fresh produce and slow meals as the real protectors. Japan keeps its edge with a diet low in red meat and rich in omega-3s from fish and soy, which consistently lowers LDL cholesterol and inflammation.
Practical Information
Travel-insurance policies in 2026 increasingly bundle heart-health add-ons—especially for trips to Russia or China, where pollution and dietary changes crank up the risk. For day-to-day prevention:
- Check your blood pressure every two years starting at 20; the American Heart Association says so.
- Hit 150 minutes of moderate activity weekly—walking, cycling, or swimming will do.
- Cut back on processed meats; the World Health Organization lists them as Group 1 carcinogens and ties heavy intake to CAD.
- Load up on whole grains, beans, and leafy greens; meta-analyses from 2025 show these foods can slash CAD risk by up to 30%.
If you’re Black American, South Asian, or have a family history of heart trouble, the American College of Cardiology now recommends annual lipid panels and early stress tests—advice in place since 2024.