Ayrshire Post

Life is precious... kiss loved ones goodbye every day

- Lorraine Howard

The British Heart Foundation is encouragin­g Ayrshire residents to kiss their loved ones goodbye when they leave home each day.

The campaign has been launched after new statistics from the British Heart Foundation Scotland revealed that nearly three- fifths of people in Scotland ( 59 per cent) don’t tell their partners that they love them before leaving the house each morning.

And nearly a quarter ( 24 per cent) don’t usually kiss their loved ones goodbye. The BHF commission­ed a survey of 2000 UK adults to highlight the sudden devastatio­n of heart disease and how the BHF’s life saving research is bringing hope to the 710,000 people in Scotland living with these conditions.

Excuses for dashing out of the house without a goodbye include not having time ( 31 per cent) and just as many admitted they simply forgot ( 31 per cent).

Many Scottish couples aren’t following old wives’ tales either, as an astonishin­g three- fifths go to bed on an argument ( 60 per cent), with close to half leaving the house in the morning before making up ( 46 per cent).

Heart disease is heartless and can strike anyone, at any time.

It tears families apart without warning, leaving them no time to say goodbye to their loved ones.

In the UK, more than a quarter of all deaths are caused by heart and circulator­y disease, which equates to one person every three minutes.

Research is the answer to this devastatio­n and the BHF is urging the public to invest in its life saving heart research.

Simon Gillespie, Chief Executive of the British Heart Foundation, said: “Many of us lead very busy lives and time with our loved ones is precious.

“Heart disease can suddenly affect anyone at any time and has a huge emotional impact on those left behind.

“We have committed to funding half a billion pounds of research over the next five years into these conditions that continue to devastate the lives of over seven million people in the UK each year.

“It is only thanks to the public’s generosity that we’re able to continue our fight against heart disease, but we urgently need more support to accelerate this research to keep more families together.”

For more than over 50 years, research funded by BHF has helped save and improve the lives of millions of people living with heart conditions.

Whether it’s a parent dying from a sudden heart attack or a baby being born with a congenital heart defect, our research is identifyin­g new treatments to help prevent, treat and one day beat heart disease.

We lead very busy lives and time with our loved ones is precious. Heart disease can affect anyone at any time and has a huge emotional impact on those left behind

 ??  ?? Kiss and make up The BHF is urging people to kiss their loved ones before they leave the house
Kiss and make up The BHF is urging people to kiss their loved ones before they leave the house

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