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Killer heart diseases continue to prey on Lothians' poorest



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Published Date: 29 April 2008
HEART disease death rates are falling throughout Scotland's most deprived areas – except in the Lothians.
A total of 211 people died in the poorest parts of the Lothians from coronary heart problems between 2004 and 2006, one more than in 2003 to 2005. The death rate also rose slightly to 112.8 per 100,000 people, although this was still below the Scotti
sh average.

Other areas, such as Greater Glasgow & Clyde, Fife and Lanarkshire, have all seen significant falls. The British Heart Foundation said part of the reason for the lack of progress was that these areas all had higher heart disease death rates in their most deprived wards to start with.

However, Grampian made significant progress from an already lower death rate – reducing it from 98.6 to 88.9 – and the BHF urged NHS Lothian to take note of successes elsewhere.

Ben McKendrick, policy and public affairs manager for BHF Scotland, said: "Lothian started at a much better place, with a death rate that was already lower than the Scottish average. However, lessons need to be learned from improvements seen elsewhere."

He added: "Our argument has always been that as death rates are higher in deprived areas, resources and initiatives need to be targeted there. Heart disease is a problem in deprived areas for a combination of factors – people are more likely to smoke, are less physically active, less likely to have a healthy diet and less likely to get the health services they need."

Although the coronary heart disease death rate in the Lothians has levelled off in recent years, it is still far lower than in 1998 to 2000 when it stood at 144.7. During those two years, 284 people died – 73 more than in the most recent figures – and health experts are committed to bringing it down further.

Dr Alison McCallum, director of public health at NHS Lothian, said: "While we are not complacent, it is encouraging to see that the work we're doing in encouraging healthy lifestyles appears to be paying off in terms of reductions of deaths from heart disease of people with deprived backgrounds. We have made providing practical help, referrals to other services and support to people in so-called hard-to-reach communities a major part of our work.

"This includes help to access services, practical support to help people stop smoking and become more active, all delivered in partnership with primary care, our local authority partners and community health projects."

Across Scotland, progress has been made since 1998 in reducing death rates in the most deprived wards from 162.4 to 117.7.





The full article contains 444 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 29 April 2008 1:42 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

me150,

29/04/2008 22:37:38
If the prats won't look after themselves then let them drop dead!

Everyone has to take responsibility for themselves so if they want to smoke and drink then so be it. Their choice so let's stop banging our gums about it.
2

AndrewS,

Edinburgh 30/04/2008 00:01:42
I think you'll find a significant correlation with truancy leading to a general ignorance and a refusal to accept drinking and smoking are unhealthy. I fail to understand how the retards can spend 30 minutes on the 27 getting back to Muirhouse not smoking, but can't do so whilst waiting on it at the stop for it to arrive.
3

AndrewS,

Edinburgh 30/04/2008 00:04:04
NHS Lothian are complacent. They allow patients to go out of wards to smoke. These patients should be discharged immediately and refused any further treatment if they continue this unacceptable behaviour
4

Big Eddie,

Edinburgh 30/04/2008 12:52:30
Be careful what you wish for, AndrewS. Do we really want to deny health services to all those who have self-inflicted illnesses or injuries? If you refuse to treat smokers, where do you stop?

Would you turn away a person who is injured as a result of (his own) dangerous driving? An alcoholic with liver disease? An obese person with type-2 diabetes? Someone who'd hurt himself playing sport? It's a slippery slope, and not one that I think we should be going down.

The NHS is available to all, and must remain available to all. Even those foolish enough to smoke.

 

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