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The pulse of UK heart health

The reduc­tion in deaths from car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease has been one of the great­est suc­cess sto­ries of the past decade. Death rates for coro­nary heart dis­ease fell in Eng­land by 43 per cent between 2001 and 2010, and for stroke by 37 per cent. The fig­ures were even bet­ter for pre­ma­ture mor­tal­i­ty, with a 46 per cent reduc­tion in death rates from heart dis­ease in those under 75 and a 42 per cent decline in stroke.

Yet car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease remains the com­mon­est cause of death, respon­si­ble in 2010 for 180,000 deaths in the UK – just under a third of the total – and for 46,000 deaths in peo­ple under 75. The bur­den varies by sex, age, social class and where you live. Death rates in Scot­land have fall­en more slow­ly than those in Eng­land and remain sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er. The rel­a­tive gap between rich and poor has widened slight­ly.

And inter­na­tion­al com­par­isons, such as the Glob­al Bur­den of Dis­ease Study pub­lished in The Lancet last year, show that although things have got a lot bet­ter in the UK, the same is true of oth­er coun­tries, some of which have done bet­ter still. Look­ing at the years of life lost to heart dis­ease, the UK has moved from 17th out of 19 to 14th between 1990 and 2010, a mod­est improve­ment in the league table; for stroke, it has moved down one place, from 12th to 13th. It remains below the EU15 aver­age for heart dis­ease and about aver­age for stroke. It is clear that there is more to be done.

Dis­abil­i­ty has declined along with death, but remains large, impos­ing a bur­den on indi­vid­u­als, the NHS and the econ­o­my as a whole. A total of 2.3 mil­lion peo­ple in the UK have coro­nary heart dis­ease and 1.3 mil­lion have had a stroke, the British Heart Foun­da­tion esti­mates. It puts the cost of car­ing for them at just under £10 bil­lion a year and the total cost at more than £21 bil­lion a year.

FOCUSING ON IMPROVEMENT

How can out­comes be improved? The plan pro­duced by NHS Eng­land relies on bet­ter detec­tion of those at risk, improved con­trol of risk fac­tors and enhanced organ­i­sa­tion of care. The over­rid­ing prin­ci­ple is to man­age car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease as a fam­i­ly of dis­eases, since patients who have one often devel­op anoth­er, linked by com­mon risk fac­tors: heart dis­ease, periph­er­al arte­r­i­al dis­ease and vas­cu­lar demen­tia, for exam­ple.

Acute care for heart attack and stroke varies wide­ly from excel­lent to poor

The NHS Health Check pro­gramme, which offers tests for all those aged between 40 and 74 with­out pre­vi­ous evi­dence of dis­ease, aims to iden­ti­fy those at risk. But take-up has been slow, costs are high and many of those found to be at risk could have been iden­ti­fied any­way through GP records.

Once iden­ti­fied, those at risk are offered advice on lifestyle, diet and exer­cise; giv­ing up smok­ing is the sin­gle most effec­tive change. But behav­iour­al advice is noto­ri­ous­ly hard to fol­low and tends to widen inequal­i­ties, with bet­ter-edu­cat­ed peo­ple who already have low­er risks more like­ly to com­ply.

Drugs to reduce blood pres­sure and blood cho­les­terol may also be pre­scribed. Already 7.5 mil­lion peo­ple are pre­scribed statins, a num­ber that could increase by a fur­ther 4.5 mil­lion if the advice from the Nation­al Insti­tute for Health and Care Excel­lence (NICE) to low­er the bar to pre­scrib­ing the drugs is fol­lowed. NICE believes this could save an addi­tion­al 4,000 lives a year at a cost of £52 mil­lion. But influ­en­tial doc­tors have ques­tioned the wis­dom of med­ical­is­ing so many out­ward­ly healthy peo­ple.

High blood pres­sure is poor­ly iden­ti­fied and treat­ed, The Lancet study found, with many cas­es unde­tect­ed and only around a third of those iden­ti­fied ade­quate­ly treat­ed. Improv­ing this pro­vides a large scope to improve out­comes

Acute care for heart attack and stroke varies wide­ly from excel­lent to poor. The plan is to build on what is already good by con­cen­trat­ing care in few­er more spe­cialised cen­tres, a change often opposed by local inter­ests. The recon­fig­u­ra­tion of stroke ser­vices in Lon­don has reduced mor­tal­i­ty by 28 per cent by con­cen­trat­ing spe­cial­ist care in few­er stroke units and is a mod­el com­mis­sion­ers in oth­er parts of the coun­try are being urged to fol­low.

Some quick wins might come from focus­ing on areas where ser­vices are poor. For exam­ple, too lit­tle is done to fol­low up with patients who suf­fer mini-strokes – tran­sient ischaemic attacks – though one in twen­ty will go on to have a stroke with­in a week. And while patients with the most severe heart attacks are already rout­ed by ambu­lance crews to car­diac cen­tres, this should be extend­ed to less severe cas­es, avoid­ing lat­er trans­fers. Heart fail­ure, increas­ing­ly com­mon in an age­ing pop­u­la­tion, has suf­fered rel­a­tive neglect. And the UK lags oth­er Euro­pean coun­tries in its use of implantable defib­ril­la­tors to con­trol heart rhythm dis­or­ders.