Heart disease killed 31% people
worldwide in 2013
Heart disease and
stroke were the number one and number two killers worldwide in 2013, reveals a
new report. While 31 percent of all deaths were from cardiovascular
disease, with 80 percent occurring in low- and middle-income
countries as of 2013, stroke accounted for 11.8 percent of all deaths,
according to American Heart Association’s 2016 Heart Disease and Stroke
Statistics Update. ‘Statistics about cardiovascular disease and stroke,
and particularly the metrics about death and the factors that contribute to
cardiovascular disease are incredibly important,’ said Mark Creager, president,
American Heart Association (AHA). Despite the progress in reducing the number
of deaths from heart disease and stroke, the numbers are still too high,
Creager said. Produced since 1958, the update is created from the most-recent
data available and compiled by the AHA, the US National Institutes of Health,
the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and other government
sources.
The study found that one of every three deaths in the US
in 2013 were from heart disease, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases.
Cardiovascular disease is not only the top killer in the US, but worldwide,
David Siscovick, senior vice president for research at the New York Academy of
Medicine in New York City. Hypertension, obesity and diabetes are global
epidemics, he said. The update now tracks health factors and behaviours known
to contribute to good cardiovascular health. These habits include smoking
status, physical activity, healthy diet, body weight, and control of
cholesterol, blood pressure and blood sugar. ‘We need to maintain our vigor and
resolve in promoting good cardiovascular health through lifestyle and
recognition and treatment of risk factors such as high blood
pressure,diabetes,
high cholesterol and smoking,’
Creager said. ‘We have made progress in the fight against cardiovascular
disease, but the battle is not won,’ Creager noted.
The findings
appeared in the journalCirculation. Here are the most common
signs associated with heart disease.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
18.12.2015
When
nothing is sure, everything is possible
Margaret Drabble
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