Did you know one person has a heart attack or stroke every 4 minutes in Australia?1 This is a shocking statistic given cardiovascular disease is largely preventable.
Sadly, in NSW, the Richmond-Tweed, Coffs Harbour-Grafton and Mid North Coast regions all have higher rates of hospitalisation from heart attack, compared to both State and national averages.2
There is no single cause for any one heart condition and most risk factors that contribute to cardiovascular disease are preventable through healthy lifestyle.
There are a range of protective factors that decrease a persons’ chance of developing cardiovascular disease, such as:
- seeing their GP for a heart health check
- being smoke free
- sitting less and moving more
- maintaining a healthy weight
- managing blood pressure
- drinking less alcohol.
Health professionals play a critical role in promoting health and wellbeing, preventing heart disease, ensuring early detection and supporting treatment after diagnosis.
Heart Week is an opportunity to start a conversation about heart health and the steps we need to take to reduce our risk of developing heart disease. The Heart Foundation has developed a pack with everything you need to know about Heart Week 2022 and all the practical resources and activities to help you get involved.
If you haven’t already, it’s also a great reminder to review how your clinic integrates heart health checks into routine practice. In 2019, MBS introduced two items known as the Heart Health Check, which aims to identify patients at risk of developing cardiovascular related events.
Check out our Primary Care Impact page ‘Improve recording of risk factors to enable CVD assessment’ to get started today.
For more on Heart Week 2022 visit https://www.heartfoundation.org.au/programs/Heart-Week
For clinical guidance, visit Mid and North Coast HealthPathways:
manc.communityhealthpathways.org
Username: manchealth
Password: conn3ct3d
- Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Cardiovascular Disease. Cat no CVD 83. [Internet] Canberra: AIHW; 2020 [Cited 26 April 2022].
- National Heart Foundation of Australia. Australian Heart Maps [Internet]. 2020 [Cited 26 April 2022].