1, a variety of factors affect the treatment of female coronary heart disease AHA referred to the existing coronary heart disease-related research findings, focusing on the medical experience of female IHD patients, and summarized those factors that may influence female coronary heart disease patients to get the correct diagnosis and treatment. 2. The prognosis of female patients with coronary heart disease is worse than that of male patients The prognosis of female patients with coronary heart disease is worse than that of male patients. Female patients with myocardial infarction have more complex first symptoms and a higher risk of bleeding after PCI than male patients. 3. Women have low awareness of coronary heart disease In 2012, more than half of women were ground informed of heart disease, but they were not aware of the related symptoms. Coronary heart disease in women is often not easily taken seriously because of the atypical symptoms. 4, women have special risk factors for coronary heart disease In recent years, the mortality rate of women aged 35-44 years has been increasing year by year, while the mortality rate of men in the same age group has been gradually decreasing. In addition to the typical risk factors associated with coronary heart disease. Little is known about the existence of some special risk factors for coronary heart disease in young women. Ethnic differences are associated with the prevalence and mortality of coronary heart disease According to the CDC, coronary heart disease accounts for 23.4% of the leading causes of death in blacks, compared to 22.9% in whites, and 20.8% of the leading causes of death in women in the Asia-Pacific region. 6, Coronary heart disease in women is a multifactorial disease including some major risk factors such as psychosocial, obesity, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, dyslipidemia, lack of exercise, smoking, age, and hypertension. Women should start to prevent these major cardiovascular risk factors at a younger age, and interventions starting in childhood can influence the tendency of women to develop coronary heart disease at a younger age. It is critical that health care providers acquire the knowledge to control the risk factors for coronary heart disease in women, and the ideal risk assessment tool is one that correctly identifies those risk factors that are specific to women. Studies have shown that women with coronary heart disease have less chest pain before an acute cardiovascular event, and most women have early symptoms such as shortness of breath or unusual fatigue, which are not easily recognized as prodromal symptoms by medical professionals. Patients themselves often delay seeking medical attention or delay going to the hospital because of this. 9.Education on gender differences in the development of coronary heart disease should be strengthened. Encourage health care and education workers, especially gynecologists, as well as health management institutions to continuously educate women, so that they can understand the specificity of coronary heart disease in women, the gender-specific risk factors, and the characteristics of physical examination of women with coronary heart disease, so as to reduce the risk of coronary heart disease in women and girls. 10. It is important to understand the gender differences in the development of coronary heart disease When evaluating women with coronary heart disease, it is important to fully understand that there are certain differences between men with coronary heart disease and women with coronary heart disease, and that these differences are gender-related, and the AHA’s scientific statement considers it essential to know this.