Cardiovascular diseases, including coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke, remain the leading cause of death globally, with lifestyle factors playing a critical role alongside genetics. Recognising the importance of daily habits, the American Heart Association (AHA) introduced Life’s Essential 8 (LE8) in 2022 to provide a comprehensive measure of cardiovascular health. LE8 builds on the earlier Life’s Simple 7 by adding sleep as a vital factor, reflecting its strong impact on heart function. The tool evaluates eight components: diet, physical activity, tobacco exposure, sleep, body weight, blood pressure, blood glucose, and blood lipids, scoring each from 0 to 100. By assessing these behaviours and health factors, LE8 offers a practical, measurable way to predict and prevent heart disease and stroke.
Understanding Life’s Essential 8 and its components
LE8 evaluates eight key components, divided into health behaviours and health factors.Health behaviours:
- Diet: Eating a balanced diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and lean proteins.
- Physical activity: Engaging in regular exercise to strengthen the heart and improve circulation.
- Tobacco exposure: Avoiding smoking and secondhand smoke to prevent vascular damage.
- Sleep: Maintaining good-quality sleep for 7–9 hours each night to support heart function.
Health factors:
- Body weight: Maintaining a healthy BMI to reduce strain on the heart.
- Blood pressure: Keeping blood pressure within a normal range to prevent artery damage.
- Blood glucose: Controlling blood sugar to prevent diabetes-related heart complications.
- Blood lipids: Maintaining healthy cholesterol and triglyceride levels to reduce plaque buildup.
Each component is scored from 0–100, with the overall LE8 score reflecting cardiovascular health as high (80–100), moderate (50–79), or low (<50).
How LE8 predicts heart disease and stroke
A study published in December 2025 in the American Journal of Preventive Cardiology looked at data from the ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities) study, which followed adults aged 45–64 over many years.
- Current prevalence: At the start, 4.1% of participants had coronary heart disease (CHD), 1.2% had a stroke, and 0.3% had atrial fibrillation (AF).
- Link with LE8: Higher LE8 scores were connected to lower rates of CHD and stroke, with sleep showing the strongest effect. There was no clear link with AF.
- Risk prediction: In the short term (3 years), each 1-point increase in LE8 reduced CHD risk by 6.5% and stroke by 5.4%. Over 27 years, each point reduced CHD risk by 4.1%.
- Across groups: Benefits were seen in men and women, across different races, slightly stronger in women.
This shows that small improvements in daily habits and health factors can greatly reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke.
Life’s essential 8: How lifestyle changes and daily habits can prevent heart disease and stroke
LE8 emphasises that lifestyle changes are powerful tools for prevention.
- Diet: Eating nutrient-rich foods helps control weight, cholesterol, and blood sugar.
- Exercise: Regular activity strengthens the heart, reduces blood pressure, and improves metabolism.
- Tobacco avoidance: Eliminating smoking lowers the risk of clogged arteries and stroke.
- Sleep: Adequate sleep regulates blood pressure, reduces inflammation, and supports overall cardiovascular health.
By tracking these behaviors along with health measures like blood pressure, glucose, and cholesterol, LE8 provides a complete picture of heart health.Clinical implicationsLE8 is more than a score: it’s a practical tool for patients and doctors:
- Early detection: Identify individuals at risk before heart disease develops.
- Lifestyle guidance: Encourage dietary changes, exercise, better sleep, and smoking cessation.
- Dynamic tracking: Monitor improvements in heart health over time.
- Immediate impact: Short-term improvements in LE8 scores can quickly reduce CHD risk.
Clinicians can use LE8 as a “heart health barometer”, helping patients make targeted changes to prevent disease and improve outcomes.