News 
 National Rural News 
 Agribusiness and General 
 General 
 Country health remains on the sick list 

Country health remains on the sick list

19/08/2008 11:27:00 AM
Victorians in rural and regional areas are dying of heart disease at a worrying rate because of a lack of preventive services and treatment, experts say.

A program screening people for cardiovascular disease in country areas has found alarming levels of high blood pressure, cholesterol problems, obesity and depression, all risk factors associated with heart attack and stroke.

The head of preventive cardiology at the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Professor Simon Stewart, said that of the 1500 people screened so far, about 50pc had high blood pressure and nearly 70pc were abdominally obese.

One man appeared to have suffered a heart attack without knowing it.

Others had not seen their GP for more than 10 years.

"The people who are at higher risk seem to be receiving less drugs, less services, less support," Professor Stewart said.

"People are dying needlessly in these rural communities when there is a solution."

The "healthy hearts" screening program will go to 10 regional centres over the next two years to test people.

He has contacted the state and federal governments to propose a permanent screening clinic in regional centres.

Professor Dawn DeWitt, head of the school of rural health at Melbourne University, said drugs such as beta blockers and other interventions for cardiovascular disease were underused in rural and regional areas.

The rate of new prescriptions per 100,000 males for lipid-lowering drugs was 286 in metropolitan areas, 147 in rural areas and 10 in remote areas.

Print
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size



Comments


No comments yet. Be the first to comment below.

Post A Comment


Screen name  *
Email address  *
Remember me?
Comment  *
We invite and encourage our readers to post comments. Comments are moderated and will appear as soon as our editor has approved them. When posting comments you agree to be bound by our Terms and Conditions.
Q: Do you believe the public has a right to know on which farms GM crops are being grown?

Yes
(65.9%)

No
(31.6%)

Undecided
(2.4%)

Total Votes: 613
Poll Date: 17/08/2008
26/11/2008 | If we're serious about roo farming, we'll need to start with a breeding program and kangaroo EBVs for marbling and tenderness.
 
Fuel Offer
 
Subscription
 
Horse Deals Australia
 
Media-Kit-08-09
 SEND...
 SAVE...
 SHARE...