The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Reduced cardiovascular disease death in 21 western countries 1989-91 V 2013-154: what is the UK doing right or what is the USA doing wrong?

Reduced cardiovascular disease death in 21 western countries 1989-91 V 2013-154: what is the UK doing right or what is the USA doing wrong?
Reduced cardiovascular disease death in 21 western countries 1989-91 V 2013-154: what is the UK doing right or what is the USA doing wrong?
Objectives: to compare UK Cardiovascular Disease Death (CDD) with twenty other Western Countries (OWC).

Design: population-controlled-based study using WHO data on CDD people aged 55-74 and Age-Standardised-Death-Rates (ASDR) rates per million (pm) contrasts UK and OWC outcomes between 1989-2015 and World Bank % GDP Expenditure-on-Health (%GDPEH) data.

Setting: twenty-one Western Countries.

Participants: national populations.

Outcome measures: reduced CDD for people aged 55-74 and ASDR confidence intervals determines statistical differences between UK and OWC over the period.

Result: all countries substantially reduced CDD 55-74, highest current rates America at 3440pm, Finland 3197pm, Greece 3173 to lowest, France 1522pm, Australia 1634pm and Japan 1866pm. Previously UK was 4th highest but fell to 8th at 2524pm, significantly reducing CDD more than 15 OWC, though three had greater falls than Britain. ASDR fell substantially everywhere but the UK had second biggest reduction, significantly reducing total CDD deaths more than 15 OWC. Highest 1980-2015 average %GDPEH was USA at 12.7%, UK’s 7.6% was lowest suggesting British cardiac services achieved more with proportionately less.

Conclusion: improvements in primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease occurred in every country, we speculate whether the UK success might be attributable to the Pan UK public health innovations, the National Service Framework (2000) to reduce myocardial infar.
Pritchard, Colin
46f5b0ae-e0aa-4167-b50c-f9d1b6d14a01
Rosenorn-Lanng, Emily
b1c53e5f-9f36-4c5f-a781-6a1aece6d257
Hansen, Lars
a9237f4e-d497-47d2-ba66-545247b3e0e5
Mahmoudi, Michael
f6a55246-399e-4f81-944e-a4b169786e8a
Pritchard, Colin
46f5b0ae-e0aa-4167-b50c-f9d1b6d14a01
Rosenorn-Lanng, Emily
b1c53e5f-9f36-4c5f-a781-6a1aece6d257
Hansen, Lars
a9237f4e-d497-47d2-ba66-545247b3e0e5
Mahmoudi, Michael
f6a55246-399e-4f81-944e-a4b169786e8a

Pritchard, Colin, Rosenorn-Lanng, Emily, Hansen, Lars and Mahmoudi, Michael (2019) Reduced cardiovascular disease death in 21 western countries 1989-91 V 2013-154: what is the UK doing right or what is the USA doing wrong? Journal of Cardiovascular Research.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to compare UK Cardiovascular Disease Death (CDD) with twenty other Western Countries (OWC).

Design: population-controlled-based study using WHO data on CDD people aged 55-74 and Age-Standardised-Death-Rates (ASDR) rates per million (pm) contrasts UK and OWC outcomes between 1989-2015 and World Bank % GDP Expenditure-on-Health (%GDPEH) data.

Setting: twenty-one Western Countries.

Participants: national populations.

Outcome measures: reduced CDD for people aged 55-74 and ASDR confidence intervals determines statistical differences between UK and OWC over the period.

Result: all countries substantially reduced CDD 55-74, highest current rates America at 3440pm, Finland 3197pm, Greece 3173 to lowest, France 1522pm, Australia 1634pm and Japan 1866pm. Previously UK was 4th highest but fell to 8th at 2524pm, significantly reducing CDD more than 15 OWC, though three had greater falls than Britain. ASDR fell substantially everywhere but the UK had second biggest reduction, significantly reducing total CDD deaths more than 15 OWC. Highest 1980-2015 average %GDPEH was USA at 12.7%, UK’s 7.6% was lowest suggesting British cardiac services achieved more with proportionately less.

Conclusion: improvements in primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease occurred in every country, we speculate whether the UK success might be attributable to the Pan UK public health innovations, the National Service Framework (2000) to reduce myocardial infar.

Text
JCR Manuscript - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (422kB)

More information

Published date: 14 February 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 428730
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/428730
PURE UUID: aa1cec1f-4bff-4b5c-8bfe-d8dce0cc5363
ORCID for Michael Mahmoudi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1293-8461

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Mar 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:24

Export record

Contributors

Author: Colin Pritchard
Author: Emily Rosenorn-Lanng
Author: Lars Hansen

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×