Daily Express

Rising obesity set to reverse drop in heart-attack deaths

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the joint fifth highest prevalence of raised blood cholestero­l.

Across the 47 countries, an average of 16.3 per cent of people had raised cholestero­l but in the UK the figure was 21.7 per cent.

Despite the worrying levels of obesity, the authors found that Britain has the lowest prevalence of raised blood pressure and the prevalence of smoking is among the lowest in Europe.

This contribute­s to the UK’s position in the lower half of the cardiovasc­ular mortality rankings.

The authors warned that “downward mortality trends for cardiovasc­ular disease may be threatened by the emerging obesity epidemic that is seeing rates of diabetes increasing”.

The research team included members from Barts Heart Centre, Queen Mary University of London, Leeds University, Oxford University and the University of East Anglia, as well as academics from abroad.

They wrote: “The emerging obesity epidemic affecting high-income countries, driven by physical inactivity and dietary indiscreti­on, needs determined action if the steep downward trend in cardiovasc­ular mortality that has occurred in the last 50 years is to be maintained.”

Lead author Dr Adam Timmis, from Queen Mary, said: “Heart disease still remains the leading cause of death for middle-income countries, while declines in high-income countries mean that cancer deaths have now become more common there.” But this downward trend is under threat.

Tam Fry, chairman of the National Obesity Forum, said: “While it is good news that fewer Britons are dying from heart attacks and have lower rates of blood pressure and smoking, the UK will not maintain this improvemen­t without new strategies to tackle the real killer reported in this research.

“To have over five per cent higher obesity levels than any other European country is appalling and the researcher­s are correct in fearing worse statistics in years to come.”

In the study, published in the European Heart Journal, researcher­s examined cardiovasc­ular disease across member countries of the European Society of Cardiology and other nations.

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