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The Aga Khan Health Services in Dar es Salaam plan to start performing heart surgery, a step forward that will provide relief to patients, who are currently forced to seek such treatment  abroad, at high cost.
This AKHS initiative will complement efforts by the Muhimbili National Hospital, which is also in the final stages of preparations for operating on heart patients. 

AKHS medical director Dr Jaffer Dharsee said at the weekend that the AKHS would provide a full range of cardiac imaging. 

He said such a procedure involved what in medical terms are called angiography, angioplasty and ballooning, stenting and (eventually) open heart surgery. 

Although he could not expand on the potential cost of heart surgery, reports indicate that the price for heart bypass surgery in India varies between $5,500 (Sh8.8million) and $ 7,800 (Sh12.4million).
In Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and other East-African countries, where the condition of medical facilities is quite grim, medical tourism to India is a boon for these countries, reports say. 

Dr Dharsee explained further that they hoped that for each operation on the heart which was conducted locally, Tanzanian patients would reduce their medical costs by half.

He explained that the AKHS and the MNH saw the necessity of providing home services to fight cardiovascular diseases, hence doing away with dependence on outside countries.
He was speaking at a symposium about 2013 cardiology updates, and the status of cardiac services in East Africa and in Dar es Salaam.
He said they planned to start providing the service by June next year, while the MNH would begin in the next two months.
“With this move, there are signs that over the next three years we will achieve a big step in treating cardiovascular diseases in this country,” he said. 

It was noted that the provision of such services here would cut costs for patients who had been seeking the services abroad. 

He also said their decision was a response to President Jakaya Kikwete’s appeal to local experts to bring heart-surgery to this country. 

While rates of cardiovascular disease, including coronary heart disease and stroke have been declining in most industrialised countries, including the United States and the UK, they are rising in most developing countries. 

Stroke mortality rates in Tanzania are three times higher than in the UK. There were nearly 46,000 deaths due to cardiovascular disease in 2002, this number was expected to rise to 63,000 in 2015 and 85,400 in 2031.
Chronic diseases create large adverse, quite underrated, economic effects on families, communities and countries. 

In 2005 alone, it was estimated that Tanzania lost $100 million in national income from premature deaths due to heart disease, stroke and diabetes. 

These losses are projected to continue to increase, cumulatively. Tanzania stands to lose about $3 billion over the next 10 years from premature deaths due to heart disease, stroke and diabetes.

 Dr Dharsee further said that the prevalence of  cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension and obesity was much higher in urban areas than in rural areas, with the highest rate in Dar es Salaam region.
It was projected that cardiovascular diseases would become the single most common cause of death in the developing and developed world, with Africa experiencing an overall steady rise in non-communicable diseases. 

Risk factors include hypertension, smoking, diabetes, obesity, unhealthy life-style habits and the ageing of the population. 

These factors combined with rapidly increasing urbanization have contributed to the overwhelming rates of cardiac-related diseases in this country.

Tanzanians have been advised to develop and adopt the culture of having regular check-up and physical exercise to avoid chronic heart disease and high blood pressure which is now common in the country. It has been established.
An Instrument used for check-up
 
Speaking to reporters in a news conference in Dar es Salaam at the weekend during the Family Walkathon to mark World Heart Day in which Tanzania is celebrating for the first time, African Medical Investment (AMI) Hospital, Internal Medicine Consultant Dr. Jesus Ochoa that it is important for the people’s to adopt physical exercise in the daily life to improve their health status.
 
Dr. Ochoa said that the type of food, life style and traditional ways of life in Tanzania is accelerating high blood pressure and chronic heart diseases to majority of citizens across the country.“Majority of people who are fat are at the high risk of being infected with heart diseases because of the high quantity of cholesterol within their bodies,” he said.
He further said that the heart diseases in Africa have taken lives of thousands of people in the continent due to lack awareness in the public.
 
 Dr. Ochoa said that AMI hospital has decided to come up with the family walkathon to sensitize the public the important of having regular check-up and physical exercise.
On his part AMI Hospital Director of Medicine Dr Humberto Jaine said that the family walkathon is part of the hospital efforts to conduct free check-up and treatment to heart patience in the country.
 
High blood pressure is a major risk factor for hypertensive heart disease
 
 
 
He said that Tanzanians should avoid the habit of having pretty of food with much cholesterol because they will generate heart diseases in the long run.
‘It is not healthy to gain weight while you don’t have regular check-ups and exercise in your daily activities,” he noted.
 
Jaine underscored that Tanzanians should adopt healthy eating habits to reduce the risk for heart diseases if they want to live longer.On World Heart Day, 29th September, the World Heart Federation is calling for people – specifically mothers who are gatekeepers to the home – to take action now to protect their own heart health, as well as that of their children and families to safeguard future generations.
 
World Heart Day was created by the World Heart Federation in 2000 to inform people around the globe that heart disease and stroke are the world’s leading cause of death, claiming 17.3 million lives each year.On 29 September each year, together with its members, the World Heart Federation aims to drive action to educate people that by controlling risk factors such as tobacco use, unhealthy diet and physical inactivity, at least 80 percent of premature deaths from heart disease and stroke could be avoided.
World Heart Day unites people from all countries and backgrounds in the fight against the CVD burden, and inspires and drives international action to encourage heart-healthy living across the world. 
 
The focus for this year’s World Heart Day is the prevention of CVD among women and children, which is a continuation of the 2011 theme; One World, One Home, One Heart. 
 
The main aim is to educate people that the threat of heart disease can begin even before birth and those children’s risk increases during childhood with their exposure to risk factors such as unhealthy diet or exposure to tobacco smoke. 

Ends.

Christina Staggs, a super-slimming mum who has gone from fatty to fitty after she lost a whopping 11 STONE in just 16 months ¿ because she wanted to look like her idol ANGELINA JOLIE
Transformation ... Christina shed half her weight to look more her screen idol Angelina Jolie, left

A SUPER-slimming mum has gone from fatty to fitty after she lost a whopping 11 STONE in just 16 months - because she wanted to like her idol Angelina Jolie.

Christina Staggs, 26, tipped the scales at 22st after gorging on sweets, chocolate bars and ice cream following the birth of her second son.

But she decided to go on a diet after a stranger told her she bore an uncanny resemblance to Hollywood beauty Angelina.

Christina joined Slimming World in April 2010 and by August this year she had shed a staggering 11st and went from a lardy size 24 to a trim size eight.

Christina, who has three sons - Dimitris, eight, Andreas, six and two-year-old Theo - now weighs 10st 9lbs and is regularly stopped in the street by people who mistake her for Brad Pitt’s stunning wife.
She said: “I must admit I never really saw the resemblance myself when I was bigger but one day I was chatting to a woman who said I looked like Angelina Jolie.

“She said we had the same lips which was quite a compliment because Angelina is famous for her big sexy pout.

Christina Staggs
 Similarity ... friends commented that Christina looked like screen star Angelina Jolie

Binge ... Christina would tuck into family size bars of chocolate
Half the size ... Christina can now fit both legs into one leg of her old jeans
 Slender ... Christina has gone down from a size 23 to a size 8

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