Paper
Document
Download
Flag content
0

European Society of Cardiology: Cardiovascular Disease Statistics 2019

Authors
Adam Timmis,Nick Townsend
Chris Gale,Aleksandra Torbica,Maddalena Lettino,Steffen Petersen,Elías Mossialos,Aldo Maggioni,Dzianis Kazakiewicz,Heidi May,Delphine Smedt,Marcus Flather,Liesl Zühlke,John Beltrame,Radu Huculeci,Luigi Tavazzi,Gerhard Hindricks,Jeroen Bax,Barbara Casadei,Stephan Achenbach,Lucy Wright,Panos Vardas,Lezha Mimoza,Goda Artan,Aurel Demiraj,Mohammed Chettibi,Naima Hammoudi,Hamayak Sisakian,Sergey Pepoyan,Bernhard Metzler,Peter Siostrzonek,Franz Weidinger,Tofig Jahangirov,Farid Aliyev,Yasmin Rustamova,Н. Манак,Aliaksandr Mrochak,Patrizio Lancellotti,Agnés Pasquet,Marc Claeys,Zumreta Kušljugić,Larisa Hudić,Elnur Smajić,Mariya Tokmakova,Plamen Gatzov,Davor Miličić,Mijo Bergovec,Christos Christou,Hera Moustra,Theodoros Christodoulides,Aleš Linhart,Miloš Táborský,Henrik Hansen,Lene Holmvang,Steen Kristensen,Magdy Abdelhamid,Khaled Shokry,Priit Kampus,Margus Viigimaa,Essi Ryödi,Matti Niemelä,Tuomas Rissanen,Jean Dallongeville,Martine Gilard,Alexander Aladashvili,Amiran Gamkrelidze,Maia Kereselidze,Andreas Zeiher,Hugo Katus,Kurt Bestehorn,Konstantinos Tsioufis,John Goudevenos,Zoltan Csanádi,David Becker,Kálmán Tóth,T. Nilsson,James Crowley,Patricia Kearney,Barbra Dalton,Doron Zahger,Arik Wolak,Domenico Gabrielli,Ciro Indolfi,Stefano Urbinati,Gulnara Imantayeva,Salim Berkinbayev,Gani Bajraktari,Artan Ahmeti,Gëzim Berisha,Erkin Мirrakhimov,Abilova Saamay,Andrejs Ērglis,Iveta Bajāre,Sanda Jēgere,Malek Mohammed,Antoine Sarkis,Georges Saadeh,Rūta Žvirblytė,Gintarė Šakalytė,Rimvydas Šlapikas,Khaled Ellafi,Fathi Ghamari,Cristiana Banu,Jean Beissel,Tiziana Felice,Sandra Buttiġieġ,Robert Xuereb,M Popovici,Aneta Bošković,Miroslav Rabrenović,Samir Ztot,Saädia Abir-Khalil,Albert Rossum,B.J.M. Mulder,Moniek Elsendoorn,Elizabeta Srbinovska‐Kostovska,Jorgo Kostov,M. Boševski,Terje Steigen,Ole Mjølstad,Piotr Ponikowski,Adam Witkowski,Piotr Jankowski,Víctor Gil,Jorge Mimoso,Sérgio Baptista,Dragoş Vinereanu,Ovidiu Chioncel,Bogdan Popescu,Evgeny Shlyakhto,Oganov Rg,Marina Foscoli,Marco Zavatta,Ana Dikić,Branko Beleslin,Mina Radovanović,Peter Hlivák,Róbert Hatala,Gabriela Kaliská,Miran Kenda,Jacek Jozwiak,Manuel Anguita,Ángel Cequier,Javier Muñiz,Stefan James,Bengt Johansson,Pyotr Platonov,Michael Zellweger,Giovanni Pedrazzini,David Carballo,Hussam Shebli,Samer Kabbani,Leïla Abid,Faouzi Addad,Engin Bozkurt,Meral Kayıkçıoğlu,Mustafa Erol,Volodymyr Kovalenko,E. Nesukay,Andrew Wragg,Peter Ludman,Simon Ray,R. Kurbanov,Daniel Boateng,Ghislain Daval,Víctor Rubio,David Sebastiao,Paola Courtelary,Isabel Bardinet,Agnès Pasquet,Zoltán Csanádi
+169 authors
,Aibek Mirrakhimov
Published
Nov 26, 2019
Show more
Save
TipTip
Document
Download
Flag content
0
TipTip
Save
Document
Download
Flag content

Abstract

Abstract Aims The 2019 report from the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Atlas provides a contemporary analysis of cardiovascular disease (CVD) statistics across 56 member countries, with particular emphasis on international inequalities in disease burden and healthcare delivery together with estimates of progress towards meeting 2025 World Health Organization (WHO) non-communicable disease targets. Methods and results In this report, contemporary CVD statistics are presented for member countries of the ESC. The statistics are drawn from the ESC Atlas which is a repository of CVD data from a variety of sources including the WHO, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, and the World Bank. The Atlas also includes novel ESC sponsored data on human and capital infrastructure and cardiovascular healthcare delivery obtained by annual survey of the national societies of ESC member countries. Across ESC member countries, the prevalence of obesity (body mass index ≥30 kg/m2) and diabetes has increased two- to three-fold during the last 30 years making the WHO 2025 target to halt rises in these risk factors unlikely to be achieved. More encouraging have been variable declines in hypertension, smoking, and alcohol consumption but on current trends only the reduction in smoking from 28% to 21% during the last 20 years appears sufficient for the WHO target to be achieved. The median age-standardized prevalence of major risk factors was higher in middle-income compared with high-income ESC member countries for hypertension {23.8% [interquartile range (IQR) 22.5–23.1%] vs. 15.7% (IQR 14.5–21.1%)}, diabetes [7.7% (IQR 7.1–10.1%) vs. 5.6% (IQR 4.8–7.0%)], and among males smoking [43.8% (IQR 37.4–48.0%) vs. 26.0% (IQR 20.9–31.7%)] although among females smoking was less common in middle-income countries [8.7% (IQR 3.0–10.8) vs. 16.7% (IQR 13.9–19.7%)]. There were associated inequalities in disease burden with disability-adjusted life years per 100 000 people due to CVD over three times as high in middle-income [7160 (IQR 5655–8115)] compared with high-income [2235 (IQR 1896–3602)] countries. Cardiovascular disease mortality was also higher in middle-income countries where it accounted for a greater proportion of potential years of life lost compared with high-income countries in both females (43% vs. 28%) and males (39% vs. 28%). Despite the inequalities in disease burden across ESC member countries, survey data from the National Cardiac Societies of the ESC showed that middle-income member countries remain severely under-resourced compared with high-income countries in terms of cardiological person-power and technological infrastructure. Under-resourcing in middle-income countries is associated with a severe procedural deficit compared with high-income countries in terms of coronary intervention, device implantation and cardiac surgical procedures. Conclusion A seemingly inexorable rise in the prevalence of obesity and diabetes currently provides the greatest challenge to achieving further reductions in CVD burden across ESC member countries. Additional challenges are provided by inequalities in disease burden that now require intensification of policy initiatives in order to reduce population risk and prioritize cardiovascular healthcare delivery, particularly in the middle-income countries of the ESC where need is greatest.

Paper PDF

This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.