“”

Women's Health, Your Way

April 29, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

GIRLHOOD / The New Cholesterol Guidelines Changed the Conversation —...

The New Cholesterol Guidelines Changed the Conversation — Here's Mine

The New Cholesterol Guidelines Changed the Conversation — Here's Mine

I was 13 when my grandfather died of a massive heart attack. The kind that doesn't give you a warning, doesn't give you time. One of those moments that rewires something in you — not in a way you can explain at 13, but in a way you carry forward every time the word "cardiology" comes up.

I'm 37 now, which still feels young until you start doing the math.

The American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association just released their first updated cholesterol guidelines since 2018, and a few things stopped me. Screening is now recommended starting at 19(!). Risk assessment begins at 30, and it now calculates your 30-year risk, not just 10, which changes the conversation entirely when you're sitting across from a doctor who thinks you're "too young to worry." For people with a family history, earlier medication is on the table. And there's a new test most of us have never heard of: Lp(a), or lipoprotein(a), recommended once in every adult's lifetime. It's mostly genetic, highly predictive, and almost never brought up unless you ask.

That last part is the one that gets me. About 1 in 4 adults has elevated LDL cholesterol, and most don't know it. Heart disease is still the number one killer of women, accounting for roughly 1 in every 5 female deaths. And yet the default is still to wait, to monitor, to revisit it later.

My grandfather didn't get later. So the next time I'm at my doctor, I'm asking for the Lp(a) test, and I'm not apologizing for it.

More from GIRLHOOD

When I had my twins, my company gave me four and a half months of paid maternity leave, and I was so grateful I could have cried — which, given... Read more
This week, mid-facial, my esthetician asked if she could pluck my chin hairs. I said yes, obviously, and then we started talking about all of the things we have to... Read more
It's National Infertility Awareness Week, which means I've been thinking a lot about the version of me who sat in a fertility clinic waiting room at 28 — college-educated, completely... Read more
When I was maybe ten or eleven, before I knew I could write, I was convinced I was going to be a fashion designer. Or a makeup artist. The plan... Read more
I feel like the theme of this column is that I am one giant, walking contradiction. A couple of weeks ago I mentioned that I always need a book in... Read more
Are we looking at ourselves too much? No, like, that's a serious question. Maybe it's the fact that I'm in my "late" 30s now. Maybe it's four hours of Zoom... Read more

In Defense of "Easy IVF"

When our friend Abbie posted a video about her "easy IVF journey," I braced for the comments. And look, I get it. For a lot of people, those two words... Read more
After nearly a decade in women's health, I thought I'd heard it all. And then a video stopped me mid-scroll and genuinely blew my mind. It turns out, hearing loss... Read more
Nobody warns you that your 30s are basically one long lesson in letting go of the plot you had in your head. Mine have included infertility, IVF, pregnancy loss, a... Read more
There's a specific kind of obsession that sets in after enough failed cycles — the kind where you start reading ingredient labels like they contain the answer. I know this... Read more