Every year, more firefighters die from sudden cardiac events than from fire.

This isn’t a controversial statement. This is what the data shows.

Yet it’s not what most firefighters focus on. They focus on avoiding burns, preventing falls, and staying safe on calls. But they ignore the risk that’s statistically most likely to kill them.

Here’s what you need to know about firefighter heart disease, and what you can actually do about it.


The Data: Why Heart Disease Kills More Firefighters Than Fire

According to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA):

Why is the rate so high for firefighters?

Multiple reasons:

  1. Extreme physical stress on calls: Your heart has to pump hard during emergencies. If you’re not fit, your cardiovascular system can fail under that stress.
  2. Psychological stress: The job is mentally stressful. Chronic stress increases heart disease risk.
  3. Sleep deprivation: Poor sleep increases inflammation and damages your cardiovascular system over time.
  4. Shift work: Circadian disruption from shift work increases heart disease risk independent of other factors.
  5. Occupational exposures: Smoke inhalation and chemical exposures damage blood vessels and promote atherosclerosis.
  6. Poor fitness levels: Many firefighters aren’t actually fit. They can pass a basic fitness test but aren’t aerobically trained.

The combination of these factors creates a perfect storm for cardiovascular disease.


Why Traditional Fitness Testing Misses the Problem

The Candidate Physical Ability Test (CPAT) is designed to be job-specific. It simulates the physical demands of firefighting.

But here’s the problem:

The CPAT doesn’t test your cardiovascular fitness or your ability to sustain effort. It tests your ability to complete one 10-minute bout of activity carrying heavy gear.

You can be strong enough to pass the CPAT and still have poor cardiovascular fitness. You can pass the test and still be at high risk for a cardiac event on a real call.

The research is clear: Cardiovascular fitness is the strongest predictor of longevity and heart disease risk. And it’s not being tested in most departments.


What Fitness Actually Protects Your Heart

Here’s what the research shows actually reduces heart disease risk in firefighters:

1. Aerobic Fitness (Cardiovascular Conditioning)

The single best predictor of cardiovascular health is VO2 max (the maximum amount of oxygen your body can utilize during intense exercise).

Higher VO2 max = lower heart disease risk.

How to build it:

Combining both is optimal. Steady-state builds aerobic base, intervals improve peak capacity.

2. Strength Training (Reduces Cardiovascular Stress)

When you’re stronger, your cardiovascular system has to work less hard during a given task.

If you’re weak and need to carry a victim down stairs, your heart has to work at 90% max heart rate. If you’re strong, that same task only requires 70% max heart rate.

This reduces the stress on your cardiovascular system over time and lowers your overall heart disease risk.

3. Managing Blood Pressure and Cholesterol

Exercise directly improves:

These are the key markers of cardiovascular health. If you’re exercising regularly and managing these markers, your risk drops significantly.

4. Stress Management and Sleep

Exercise is one of the best stress management tools available. It:

Better sleep and lower stress = better cardiovascular health.


The Practical Program to Protect Your Heart

Here’s what a firefighter should actually be doing to protect their heart:

Aerobic Training: 3-4 days per week

Strength Training: 3 days per week

Recovery and Sleep: Non-Negotiable

Stress Management: Daily

Medical Screening: Regular


The Reality Check

Heart disease is preventable. The research is clear:

Firefighters who are aerobically fit, maintain healthy blood pressure and cholesterol, manage stress, and sleep well have dramatically lower risk of sudden cardiac events.

The problem isn’t that we don’t know what to do. The problem is that many departments don’t prioritize cardiovascular fitness the way they should.

You have to do it yourself. Make aerobic fitness part of your training. Get your cardiovascular fitness tested. Know your numbers (blood pressure, cholesterol, resting heart rate).

Your heart is the most important muscle you have. Protect it like your life depends on it.

Because it does.