According to a British Heart Foundation (BHF) analysis, 80 persons per 100,000 in England will die from heart and circulation disorders before the age of 75 in 2022. This was the highest level since 2011 when 83 out of 100,000 persons died prematurely, and it was the third consecutive year that the death rate increased, coinciding with the pandemic. According to experts, the “first time there has been a clear reversal in the trend for almost 60 years” has occurred since 2020, following a “significant slowdown” in advances between 2012 and 2019.
In 2022, more than 39,000 persons under the age of 75 died of cardiovascular disease, which included heart attacks, strokes, and coronary heart disease
In 2022, more than 39,000 persons under the age of 75 died of cardiovascular disease, which included heart attacks, strokes, and coronary heart disease. It corresponds to 107 persons dying daily, or about five people per hour. It was the largest number of premature deaths from heart disease since 2008 when nearly 40,000 individuals died, and it has increased year after year since a low of 33,700 in 2014. When adjusted for changes in population growth and age, the 2019 death rate of 73 per 100,000 people was the lowest. Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan, associate medical director at the BHF and a consultant cardiologist, stated that Britain was “in the grip of the worst heart care crisis in living memory”. “Every part of the system providing heart care is damaged, from prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and recovery, to crucial research that could give us faster and better treatments,” she went on to say.
“This is happening at a time when more people are getting sicker and need the NHS more than ever. I find it tragic that we’ve lost hard-won progress to reduce early death from cardiovascular disease.” While the rate of deaths fell by 11 per cent between 2012 and 2019, this was down from the 33 per cent it reduced by in the seven years prior.
Pressure on the NHS and its services, as well as the pandemic’s impact, are partly to blame
It has grown about 13% since the pandemic, reversing a decade of gains. Pressure on the NHS and its services, as well as the pandemic’s impact, are partly to blame, according to the charity, but the government has failed to act on “warning signs” for more than a decade. According to the BHF, millions of people are living with undiagnosed conditions that put them at risk, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and type 2 diabetes, and there is a lack of action to combat “stubbornly high obesity rates,” with roughly two-thirds of adults in England classified as overweight or obese.
“This is storing up huge problems for the future”, the charity said. Dr Charmaine Griffiths, chief executive at the BHF, said 50 years of progress had been “followed by a lost decade of progress in which far too many people have lost loved ones”. “We can stop this heartbreak, but only if politicians unite to address the preventable causes of heart disease; cut long waiting lists for people who need life-saving heart and stroke care; and help power scientific breakthroughs to unlock revolutionary new treatments and cures,” she said.
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said: “This government has already taken significant action to reduce cardiovascular disease and its causes, including increasing access to testing and successfully encouraging reduced salt and sugar intake, but we know there is more to do. “Our Major Conditions Strategy will help prevent and manage conditions including cardiovascular disease while our plans to create a smoke-free generation represent the most significant public health intervention in a generation. “In addition, we are investing almost £17 million in an innovative new digital NHS Health Check, expected to deliver an additional one million health checks in its first four years.”