Home NEWS Pharmacists will offer on-the-spot health checks as part of a new drive to slash heart disease

Pharmacists will offer on-the-spot health checks as part of a new drive to slash heart disease

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Pharmacists will offer on-the-spot health checks as part of a new drive to slash heart disease

High street pharmacists are to offer shoppers on-the-spot health checks as part of an NHS drive to cut heart disease.

NHS bosses announced last night that free blood pressure checks, cholesterol tests and mobile heart scans will be offered in pharmacies from October.

The announcement – timed to coincide with the world’s largest meeting of cardiologists which is taking place in Paris this week – is part of an NHS plan to prevent 150,000 heart attacks and strokes within a decade.

Experts speaking at the European Society of Cardiology congress said the new approach will help reach the millions who are at risk yet rarely go to their GP so have no idea of the danger.

Pharmacists will be encouraged to offer the checks to customers – although it will be up to them who they target.

As well as handing out prescriptions pharmacists will also offer free health checks from October

Consultant cardiologist Professor Kazem Rahimi, of Oxford University, yesterday presented a study which showed that people with high blood pressure in middle age are at significantly higher risk of suffering a heart attack or stroke in later life.

At age 40, for example, every 20-point increase in blood pressure raises the risk of an attack in the next eight years by 18 per cent. Yet one in eight adults – about 5.5million in England alone – have no idea they have high blood pressure. Millions more are thought to be living with high cholesterol and abnormal heart rhythms, which also increase the risk of heart disease.

Professor Rahimi said: ‘Testing people through pharmacies is a really good approach. If you can reach people who don’t tend to go to their GPs, you are likely to identify a large number of people who will need intervention who wouldn’t be picked up otherwise.’

Officials said the scheme would help identify risks far earlier – enabling patients to be offered targeted medication.

Pilot schemes have seen some types of strokes fall by a quarter, they said.

Chemists will begin offering the NHS ‘rapid detection service’ from October, including mobile electrocardiograms to spot irregular heartbeats, as well as blood pressure checks and instant finger-prick cholesterol tests.

If successful, the scheme will be extended to every pharmacist in the country within three years.

If the tests show someone is at risk, pharmacists will be expected to give advice on exercise and diet, with results passed directly to GPs, who can prescribe medication.

The checks are part of a £13billion five-year contract for community pharmacists which aims to expand their roles and take pressure off GPs.

The plans follow Government proposals to scrap ‘one size fits all’ health MOTs at GP surgeries

England’s top doctor Professor Stephen Powis – the medical director of NHS England – said: ‘Heart disease and strokes dramatically cut short lives, and leave thousands of people disabled every year, so rapid detection of killer conditions through high-street heart checks will be a game-changer.

‘Reducing lifestyle risks and treating high-risk conditions are key to preventing serious ill health, and the NHS Long Term Plan will help people take positive action for their own wellbeing.’

Cardiovascular disease is Britain’s biggest killer, with deaths from heart attacks, strokes and circulatory diseases accounting for 160,000 deaths in the UK every year.

The plans follow Government proposals to scrap ‘one size fits all’ health MOTs at GP surgeries.

Professor Bryan Williams of University College London, speaking in Paris yesterday, said: ‘Heart disease and stroke remain the most important cause of premature death and disability and we have the means to prevent many of them.

‘The key is early detection of those at risk and doing this is a way that is convenient for the public, not having to wait for a GP appointment.’

More than 100 pharmacies in Cheshire and Merseyside have already begun offering blood pressure screening – with plans to recruit more than 200 more chemists to the service as it expands.

And pilot schemes in Lambeth and Southwark in south London have already identified more than 1,400 patients suffering from atrial fibrillation – an irregular heart rhythm – who should have been taking blood thinning drugs, but were not.

In total, 1,300 of the patients have now been put on the medication, leading to a 25 per cent reduction in the rate of strokes linked to their heart condition.

The announcement comes alongside the launch of a new generation of smart devices to check heart health, which will be used by pharmacies.

One gadget, called KardiaMobile 6L, can be fitted to the back of a smartphone and can spot an irregular heartbeat in just 30 seconds.

Gran first to get device in chest to warn doctors she’s in danger 

Margaret McDermott – first person in Britain to get revolutionary in-heart computer

A BRITISH woman has received the world’s first in-heart micro-computer which instantly tells doctors if her health is in danger.

Margaret McDermott, 75, a grandmother of 14, is taking part in a clinical trial aimed at improving care for patients with heart failure.

She said the device, implanted in the left atrium of her heart, was a ‘miracle’ that had transformed the quality of her life since her surgery in July.

For the first time, left atrial pressure readings are attainable at home with the V-LAP, the world’s first in-heart sensor

Heart failure occurs when the heart muscle is too weak to pump blood around the body. Victims struggle to breathe and suffer swollen legs, with many eventually needing a transplant or dying young.

Experts believe the technology could save the NHS millions by keeping patients healthy. The wireless monitor, called the V-LAP, allows doctors to track patients. If the device detects abnormalities in the patient’s heart, doctors are alerted automatically so they can intervene early, before the condition worsens.

They will then contact the patient for a consultation and the patient’s medication could be adjusted. Currently, if doctors want to check changes to heart signs, patients must be admitted to hospital.

Experts said the technology, made by Israeli firm Vectorious, is the most accurate form of home heart monitoring yet available.

Mrs McDermott, from Birmingham, said: ‘It’s wonderful. Every day I wake up and I’m not out of breath. Before I was really struggling, and relying on inhalers. It feels like a miracle.’

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