Wales needs action to tackle premature deaths from chronic diseases

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ViewsFebruary 24th, 2021

Adam Fletcher, Head of British Heart Foundation (BHF) Cymru, highlights why smoking, obesity and alcohol continue to present a huge public health challenge in Wales and measures to tackle them must ensure that the health inequality gap is not widened.

Heart disease, cancer, stroke, chronic lung disease and complications because of diabetes cause well over half of all deaths in Wales, at least 20,000 every year. They are known as non-communicable diseases (or NCDs) and many of these deaths could be prevented if more was done to reduce the numbers of people who are overweight or have obesity, who smoke, and who drink more than the recommended amount of alcohol.

The scale of the challenge

An ageing population, the rise in co-morbidities, an increase in many risk factors for heart and circulatory disease, and persisting health inequalities, all mean that strong action is required. Tobacco alone costs the Welsh NHS an estimated £386 million per year, with the greatest burden of tobacco-related illness concentrated in the poorest communities. Meanwhile, illnesses associated with obesity are projected to cost the Welsh NHS more than £465 million per year by 2050.

Heart and circulatory diseases, respiratory disease and cancer are the main contributors to the overall burden of disease, and years of life lost in Wales. Wales’s healthy life expectancy is low at only 61.7, and reaches as low as 50.7 in the most deprived communities. We know that many deaths from NCDs, and the lost healthy years of life caused by chronic diseases, could be avoided by addressing some of the biggest risk factors more effectively.

The Covid-19 pandemic has brought the challenge of premature deaths in Wales into even sharper focus. We are now aware of the links between underlying heart conditions and risk factors such as smoking, excessive alcohol intake and obesity on the severity of Covid-19 infections.

This is why BHF Cymru is working with other leading health charities and the Welsh Government to address this challenge. Ahead of May’s Senedd election, we want to see all political parties make the prevention of some of Wales’ biggest killers a top priority and commit to a range of public health interventions to reduce the numbers of people who are overweight or obese, who smoke, and who drink more than the recommended amount of alcohol.

The changes we need

BHF Cymru – in collaboration with ASH Wales, Asthma UK and British Lung Foundation Wales, Cancer Research UK, Diabetes Cymru, Stroke Association Wales and the British Liver Trust – has set out a series of priorities to improve population health in Wales by tackling the biggest risk factors for chronic diseases.

It is vital that Welsh political leaders now commit to empowering people to make healthier choices through interventions to reduce smoking rates, levels of overweight and obesity and alcohol consumption. All of which we know impact worse on the poorest in our society. The evidence shows that the environment around us heavily influences whether we smoke, the amount of alcohol we drink and what we eat. Population-wide measures can ensure that the health inequality gap is not widened and that all communities are given the best opportunities to make healthier choices. For example, the visibility of products on our high streets and the way they are marketed all contribute to Wales having a low healthy life expectancy. Restricting the advertising of alcohol and high fat, sugar and salt food and drink products should be a priority.

The next Welsh Government must also commit to greater investment in treatment and support services and ensure they reach everyone in Wales who needs them. These services are the most effective way to quit smoking or reduce alcohol consumption. However, current services in Wales are not reaching everyone who needs them. Though the ‘Help Me Quit’ service is effective at helping some people to quit smoking, only about 3% of smokers in Wales access the service each year.

The restoration of support services for weight management, alcohol treatment and smoking cessation should be at the heart of the NHS’s recovery planning. This should include sharing learning on how new technology can provide more flexible and accessible options for people in need of support.

Time for change

Ahead of the election in May, all political parties must commit to taking stronger action against preventable death and disease. The next Welsh Government has the opportunity to support people to make positive health choices and reduce their risk of preventable illness. We must act now to ensure that the healthy choice is an easy choice for everyone in Wales.

Full details of the report and its recommendations can be found here: https://www.bhf.org.uk/what-we-do/in-your-area/wales/ncd-prevention-report

Adam Fletcher is head of British Heart Foundation Cymru

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