Daily Mirror

Stroke toll falls

Chance of dying is down by 24%

- BY SHAN ALLY mirrornews@mirror.co.uk @DailyMirro­r

THE risk of dying from a stroke fell by nearly a quarter over a 15-year period, research reveals.

Improvemen­ts in care and treatment are behind the reduction, a study conducted by Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital Trust suggests.

This includes higher admission rates to hospital, increased use of CT and MRI scans, and more frequent use of thrombolyt­ic and anticoagul­ant medication­s in the acute phase of the stroke.

The team looked at 3,128 patients who had an ischaemic stroke, a stroke caused by a blood between 2000 and 2015.

The rate of strokes fell by 43% in the period, with the risk of death from stroke falling by 24%.

The death rate within a year of the stroke dropped

EXPERT Dr Yanzhong Wang clot, from 32.6% to 20.15% and the risk of disability in the year after a stroke fell from 34.7% to 26.7%.

Lead author Dr Yanzhong Wang, of King’s College London, said: “It’s really positive that for patients who have a stroke, the risk of death and disability is decreasing. “Trends are moving right direction.

A shift towards less severe strokes, perhaps caused by improved public health, could also play a role in the change.” in the

THE noise from planes and traffic has ground to a halt, bringing the tourism industry to a standstill as the effects of government-imposed lockdowns take place around the world.

While the silence has resulted in some early positives, such as reduction in pollution levels, a quiet crisis is taking place behind the scenes which could wipe out decades of conservati­on work.

It is now feared thousands of animals may be sold off to zoos, illegal loggers or forced on to the streets to die of neglect as sanctuarie­s have lost their major source of funding from tourists.

More worryingly, it could also see the return of poachers invited into lodges, camps and national parks by laid-off workers trying to make ends meet.

“The tragic truth is that wildlife is an asset, dead or alive,” an owner of a lodge in Kruger National Park, South Africa, admitted. “We are in a remote location that’s hard to police, and no one knows better than my 34 workers where to find the rhino horn and the ivory.”

He told how in “normal conditions” the knowledge that brings in tourists and pays their wages “makes them fiercely protective, but with families to feed and no work” the temptation to make fast cash in these hard times would be too strong for some to resist.

In Thailand, conservati­onists are also warning that more than 1,000 elephants face starvation or a return to forest labour in dire conditions.

Their plight illustrate­s the challenges faced by wildlife centres across a region that is heavily dependent on tourist income – from orangutan sanctuarie­s in Borneo to rehabilita­tion centres for bears in Laos and Vietnam. Most cannot be returned to the wild because they were rescued from private owners or the illegal wildlife trade and they would not survive.

Wildlife tour operators are now urging tourists who have booked trips firstly not to cancel but to postpone them until next year to ensure funds continue to get to the front line.

Secondly, for those considerin­g future trips to put down deposits now as a lifeline for cash-strapped camps to stop employees seeking alternativ­e sources of income that will have a disastrous impact on wildlife conservati­on.

THREAT African rhino

The tragic truth is that wildlife is an asset whether dead or alive

Amid gloom, there w cheer in the house) Bright of the won Daily Mir Environmen­t National Repor Press Awards. possible T without the charities, tire conservati­onis including the Campa Hunting. C

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