The Scotsman

We need a heart-toheart talk about future treatment of Scotland’s biggest killer

James Cant reports on action plans for cardiac healthcare

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Scot land has a problem with heart disease. Ischaemic heart disease( IHD) remains Scotland’ s single biggest killer and constitute­s the country’ s single biggest health burden.

Beyond this much-used line however, heart disease has a profound impact on our health care system, our clinical community, and most importantl­y, people the length and breadth of the country.

Scotland is at across roads in our national focus on heart disease. Currently the Scottish Government’s actions on heart disease are set out in the Heart Disease Improvemen­t Plan (2014). This was a refresh of the Better Heart Disease and Stroke Care Action Plan (2009) which refocused attention on six key priority areas, previously identified by the Action

Plan in 2009. However, the healthcare system and the policies that underpin it have changed substantia­lly since 2009, and we are facing an even greater pace of change over the next ten years.

Healthcare policy in Scotland has also moved on significan­tly since 2009. The Digital Health and Care Strategy20­17-2022provid­es a broad policy framework for the way in which the health care system in Scotland can grasp the opportunit­ies afforded by technology.

Meanwhile, the 2018 Gen eral Medical Services Contract in Scotland re imagine show people with long-term conditions engage with a wide range of healthcare profession­als and the Chief Medical Officer’s concept of Realistic Medicine promotes core aims of innovat

ing to improve, building a personalis­ed approach to care and encouragin­g shared decision making between patient and clinician.

Technology and expanding access to data will impact significan­tly on healthcare, while advance sin medical science mean that many people are now surviving cardiac events like a heart attack. But many more are living with long term conditions – risk factors including high blood pressure or high cholestero­l affect increasing numbers of people in Scotland and have not yet been fully addressed.

It is time for Scotland to seize the pioneering spirit of Dr Desmond Julian, who set up the first coronary care unit in Europe in Edinburgh; through to the world-class researcher­s of today who continue to deliver

breakthrou­gh sand broad en our knowledge and understand­ing of heart disease.

Now, we have an opp or tunit y to reflect on the great success of the 2009 and 2014 plans, as we should, but we also have an excellent opportunit­y to look to the future, and ensure our healthcare system is delivering for people with heart disease today and ready for the challenges of tomorrow.

A national conversati­on is required; one that considers the challenges for a primary care system that must support increasing numbers of people living with long term conditions and is cognisant of a secondary care environmen­t that is dealing with more complex cases at a time of rapid technologi­cal advancemen­t.

A national conversati­on that puts patients first; one that reflects their needs and wishes and thinks about what living with and dying well with heart disease means to them.

A national conversati­on that is collaborat­ive with Government, clinicians, patients and the third sector working together to deliver a strategy for Scotland that is ambitious, for ward thinking and built on breakthrou­ghs.

James Cant, B HF Scotland director.

 ??  ?? 0 Many people live with long-term conditions such as high blood pressure
0 Many people live with long-term conditions such as high blood pressure

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