The Scotsman

A&E stroke admissions up by 30 per cent since 2009

● BHF research shows a greater awareness of stroke symptoms

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE

The number of people going to accident and emergency department­s following a stroke has increased by over 30 per cent since 2009, according to new estimates from the British Heart Foundation.

In 2008-9, 79,373 people went to A&E department­s in England after having a stroke. By 2015-16 this number had increased to 104,426 people, peaking at 126,242 A&E visits in 2014-15. However, in Scotland, there has been an increase of around 5 per cent of people from 2009 to 2016 with a first admission as an emergency with a principal diagnosis of stroke.

Latest figures show that stroke now costs the UK’S healthcare system an estimated £1.93 billion.

Previous research has estimated costs to the UK around £9bn a year as a society.

The British Heart Foundation (BHF), which is one of the largest independen­t funders of stroke research in the UK, said these increasing figures are the result of greater awareness of stroke symptoms, meaning that more people who have had a stroke make it to A&E.

However, despite this, the number of people dying in the UK after suffering a stroke has remained stubbornly high, with numbers largely unchanged in the last five years. The BHF warned

0 Strokes cost the healthcare system an estimated £1.93 billion that more research is urgently needed to find better ways to prevent and treat the disease. Only one drug, alteplase, is currently approved to treat stroke in the UK and for some types of stroke there is no proven treatment.

A stroke occurs when the blood supply to part of the brain is cut off, causing brain cells to become damaged or die. The two most common types of stroke are ischaemic and haemorrhag­ic stroke. Ischaemic strokes happen when the artery that supplies blood to your brain is blocked, for example by a blood clot. Haemorrhag­ic strokes happen when a blood vessel bursts and bleeds into your brain.

Professor Sir Nilesh Samani, medical director at the British Heart Foundation, said: “This year in the UK around 40,000 people will die after having had a stroke, whilst 1.2 million people are living with the cruel and debilitati­ng after-effects of this devastatin­g disease.

“Although some exciting new developmen­ts have been made in stroke treatment, the options at our disposal for treating stroke patients are still far too limited.”

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