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‘Know your cholesterol like you know your Pin code’

Article source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-47226777

Accessed from the world wide web at 11:00 hrs on 14.02.19.

People are being encouraged to know their cholesterol and blood pressure numbers as well as they know their bank Pin code – because it could save their life.

These numbers flag up early signs of cardiovascular disease, which can lead to heart attacks and strokes.

Forty health organisations have teamed up to urge more people to go for a routine NHS health check.

Doctors should also identify and treat at-risk patients better, they say.

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) causes one in four deaths in England, the equivalent of someone dying every four minutes, according to Public Health England and NHS England.

Poor heart and artery health can also lead to heart failure, kidney disease, arterial disease and vascular dementia.

So, health bodies are leading efforts to improve the detection and treatment of three conditions that contribute to CVD – atrial fibrillation, high blood pressure and high cholesterol – over the next 10 years.

These conditions often have no symptoms, which is why health experts are recommending people aged over 40 take up a free NHS health check.

These can be booked at GP surgeries. They are also available at some local pharmacies and shopping centres.

PHE recommends checking your local area to find out where they are being offered.

People over 30 are being urged to take the Heart Age Test.

What is high cholesterol?

Cholesterol is carried in your blood by proteins. It can build up in the artery walls, restricting blood flow to the heart, brain and rest of the body. It can be measured with a blood test.

Total cholesterol levels should be:

  • 5mmol/L or less for healthy adults
  • 4mmol/L or less for those at high risk

You are at high risk if you have a family history of heart disease, heart attacks or strokes, are overweight or have high blood pressure.

What is high blood pressure?

Blood pressure is recorded using two numbers – the systolic pressure at which the heart pumps blood around your body and the diastolic pressure which measures resistance to blood flow in the blood vessels.

  • high blood pressure is usually 140/90mmHg or higher
  • ideal blood pressure is usually between 90/60mmHg and 120/80mmHg
  • low blood pressure is lower than 90/60mmHg

Most cases of CVD are preventable and, alongside free health checks, PHE recommends people should:

  • stop smoking
  • eat healthily
  • keep to a healthy weight
  • drink at safe levels

The report also calls on health professionals to improve the way they manage patients at risk of CVD.

By 2029, PHE and NHS England want:

  • 80% of people with high blood pressure detected and treated – up from 57% currently
  • 75% of 40- to 74-year-olds having cholesterol levels measured – fewer than 50% currently take up the free health check
  • 45% of 40- to 74-year-olds at high risk of CVD treated with statins – up from from 35% currently

These targets will help meet the commitment to prevent 150,000 heart attacks, strokes and cases of dementia, as set out in the government’s long-term plan for the NHS.

But there is no new funding for these new targets.

‘Needlessly at risk’

Duncan Selbie, chief executive of Public Health England, said: “We know our Pin numbers but not the numbers that save our lives.

“Thousands of heart attacks and strokes can be prevented by more people knowing their blood pressure and cholesterol numbers and by seeking help early.”

Prof Stephen Powis, NHS medical director, said reducing health inequalities was also a priority, with people in the most deprived communities four times more likely to die prematurely from CVD than those in the most well off.

England’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: “Almost half of those with high blood pressure are going about their daily lives without it being detected or treated.

“Millions of people are needlessly at risk of heart attacks or strokes when it could be prevented.

“So, I want to help more people take the time out to protect their future health and get checked.”

Five million people are estimated to have undiagnosed high blood pressure in England.