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Women Speak From Their Hearts to Save Lives

Female Heart Patients Join Together to Prevent Heart Disease

Carrie Vincent is a wife and mother from Westminster, Md., and she's on a nationwide mission about an issue close to her heart -- women and heart attacks.

A heart attack survivor helps spread the word about heart disease in women.

In December, Vincent held her first "heartwarming party" -- a gathering of women in her community who listened to chilling details of the day she nearly lost her life.

As the women gathered over platters of heart-healthy snacks, Vincent, who is petite, fit and looks perfectly healthy -- told her improbable story.

"I'm here today because 16 months ago, I had a heart attack," Vincent told the group.

Just five days after she gave birth to her first child, Vincent suffered a massive heart attack. The pressure and nausea overwhelmed her as she sat on the couch holding her newborn son. Vincent was rushed to the hospital by ambulance, and then airlifted to a major medical center where doctors broke the news.

"My God, I was 31 years old -- 31-year-olds don't have heart attacks," she remembers thinking.

She had no family history of heart disease and said she was aware of no previous symptoms, which cardiologist Dr. Sharonne Hayes, director of the Women's' Heart Clinic at the Mayo Clinic, said was no surprise.

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"It is the No. 1 killer of women, but they don't know it, and their health care providers don't know it," Hayes said.

Nearly a half-million women die of heart disease every year, and more than 44 million women are at risk, according to the American Heart Association. Hayes said that even within the women's health community, doctors often miss the warning signs.

So the Mayo Clinic and a Washington, D.C., advocacy group called WomenHeart are training an army of messengers to raise awareness about heart disease in women.

For Expert Answers on Your Heart Disease Questions, Visit the ABCNews.com OnCall+ Heart Disease Center

Since heart disease is more likely to be treated accurately in men than in women, this program gives female survivors a look at the medical equipment that helped save their lives. They handled the pacemakers that keep their hearts beating, and the tiny stents that hold open their blocked arteries.

These women are also learning to use the most powerful weapon they have against heart disease -- their personal stories.

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