This article came out in The Star newspaper, dated 21st September 2012.
KUALA LUMPUR: Heart disease is the number one killer among Malaysian
women and is two and a half times as common than dying from all cancers
combined, warned the National Heart Association of Malaysia.
Its president Datuk Dr Azhari Rosman dispelled the common perception that only older men were prone to heart diseases and strokes.
“Women must maintain a high index of suspicion,” he said here yesterday.
“Cancer
does not take as many lives as cardiovascular diseases. Women also tend
to dismiss pain more easily than men and generally have a higher pain
threshold.”
Dr Azhari said the latest 2011 National Health and
Morbidity Survey (NHMS IV) had revealed some alarming statistics,
including the fact that Malaysian women had the highest body mass index
(BMI) in the South-East Asian region.
“Obesity is the harbinger
of many conditions,” he said. “The NHMS IV study reports that out of
17,000 women surveyed, 29.4% were overweight while 15% were obese.”
Dr
Azhari, a consultant cardiologist at the National Heart Institute, said
that Malaysian women also had one of the highest prevalence of
hypertension in South-East Asia, even more than men.
He said
women also formed a 60% majority of Malaysians who had elevated total
cholesterol levels, another factor that contributed to heart disease.
Dr
Azhari said that data also showed that most Malaysians were admitted to
the hospital for Acute Coronary Syndrome around the age of 59 years.
“This is seven years below the average in other countries which is around 66 years.
“We have also treated a 19-year-old for heart disease and done a heart bypass on a 21-year-old,” he revealed.
Dr
Azhari stressed that creating awareness among the public was critical
as heart disease was “completely preventable” if detected early.
To
this end, he said the Women's Heart Health Organisation (WH2O) was
created to educate the public and healthcare providers that women were
susceptible to heart diseases and strokes too.
In line with
National Heart Day on Sept 29, NHAM, in collaboration with the Malaysian
Heart Foundation, has organised a “Walk A Mile” activity at Taman Tasik
Titiwangsa on Sept 30.
They will also have other physical activities and health screenings.
For details on other activities planned in the next few weeks, visit www.malaysianheart.org.
Source: The Star, 21 September 2012
kumaran nadaraja
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