Sligo Weekender

900 live with heart failure

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THE estimated 900 people living with heart failure in Sligo are being urged to embrace a wide range of supports to help them manage the condition.

The Irish Heart Foundation is at the centre of a national drive to provide vital back-up to patients who need help coping with the illness.

Lucinda McNerney, the Irish Heart Foundation’s Heart Failure Programme manager, said: “People often feel shock, trauma and isolation after a diagnosis of heart failure, but with the right supports, it is manageable.

“We want to let these patients in Sligo know that we are with them on that journey, in terms of counsellin­g, online meetings, a Nurse Support Line, exercise classes, newsletter­s, a podcast series and peer-topeer support to help them to keep well, both physically and mentally.

“We have patients in our network aged 30 and above, whose daily lives have changed – their work status, having to take medication, dealing with lower energy. All this can be helped with access to informatio­n and support, both from our healthcare profession­als and talking to people on a similar path.” The plea for patients to reach out coincided with Heart Failure Awareness Week, which was last week. Heart failure occurs when the organ stops working as well as it should and finds it more difficult to pump blood around the body efficientl­y.

Dr Emer Joyce, a consultant cardiologi­st at the Mater Hospital and chair of the Irish Heart Foundation’s Heart Failure Council, said it can arise independen­t of age – with lifestyle factors such as diet, smoking, excess alcohol consumptio­n and lack of exercise fuelling prevalence of cases among younger people.

She said: “You can live with heart failure and people can actually get it into remission.

“People who are most likely to achieve that are those who not only follow the medication­s, but follow all the lifestyle factors such as being physically active, keeping a healthy BMI and minimising any potential cardiotoxi­ns.” Mother-of-three Karen MacLaughli­n, 57, one of the 90,000 people in Ireland living with heart failure, says every day is a fight since her diagnosis in January last year.

“Fear becomes your daily companion. Fear of dying, your heart condition worsening, another heart attack. Every day is a fight and our invisible disability is not recognised. “The charity’s Facebook group, ‘Heart Support Network’ gives me the opportunit­y to see the stories of other people who face similar challenges and enables me to feel less alone and isolated,” she said.

If you are a heart failure patient and would like to join the Irish Heart Foundation’s Network and access support, sign up at irishheart.ie or contact Lucinda McNerney on 01-668 5001/heartfailu­re@ irishheart.ie.

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