Most people around the globe with high cholesterol are not getting the treatment they need, claims the largest ever study of 147m people.
High levels of the blood fat are linked with cardiovascular disease, the world's biggest killer, which takes 17m lives a year.
The report in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization says too few people are put on cholesterol-lowering drugs.
The data, spanning a decade, is from England, Scotland and six more nations.
Between 1998 and 2007 information on cholesterol levels and prescribing patterns were gathered for England, Germany, Japan, Jordan, Mexico, Scotland, Thailand and the US.
The analysis found many at-risk people in middle-income and western countries alike are not on cheap and widely available statin drugs that would substantially cut their risk of heart attack and stroke.
The report authors, which included Dr Gregory Roth from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation in the US, say: "These findings support the growing recognition that cardiovascular diseases are not merely 'diseases of affluence' and that some middle-income countries are beginning to face a double burden of both chronic and communicable diseases."
Global issue
For example, in Thailand 78% of adults surveyed, who were found to have high cholesterol, had not been diagnosed, while in Japan, 53% of adults were diagnosed but remained untreated.
Although England fared slightly better, in 2006, when its snap-shot was undertaken, over two-thirds of people remained undiagnosed and around a fifth were diagnosed but untreated.
Mexico did the best, diagnosing and treating nearly 60% of cases.
Experts stress that things may have moved on since the data was gathered.
For example, England last year announced a mass programme where every person aged 40 to 74 would be offered a cholesterol check by the GP in a bid to reach those that had previously been missed.
But certainly there is still more progress that could be made on a global scale, says Dr Roth.
He said: "Cholesterol-lowering medication is widely available, highly effective and can play an essential role in reducing cardiovascular disease around the world.
"Despite these facts, effective medication coverage for control of high cholesterol remains disappointingly low."
Not all patients with high cholesterol will need drug treatment. Lifestyle measures like taking regular physical activity and eating a healthy diet, as well as giving up smoking, can help prevent heart disease and stroke.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Dr James Orleans-Lindsay wins Man of the Year at 9th EMY Africa Awards
2 mins -
Medical Council to enforce specialist distribution nationwide
31 mins -
Fire guts old Fadama market, man reportedly loses GHC800,000
36 mins -
Nacee bemoans low performance fees for gospel artistes
37 mins -
We don’t operate investment platform – GNPC
53 mins -
Ghana Fact-checking Coalition condemns disinformation on voting by Wontumi FM broadcaster
55 mins -
IFRS 17 will augment and accelerate NIC’s efforts to implement risk-based capital – Deloitte
57 mins -
IFRS 17 is one of biggest changes to financial reporting standards in insurance industry – Deloitte
1 hour -
Enimil Ashon: Whose polls do you believe: ‘Global Info or Prof Sarpong?
1 hour -
Ghana Climate Innovation Centre welcomes 25 businesses into Cohort 10
1 hour -
ADB will continue to enhance customer value and service experience – Managing Director
1 hour -
Colour Cure Exhibition highlights art’s role in healing and advocacy
1 hour -
GPL 2024/25: Aduana FC sack coach Yaw Acheampong after poor run
1 hour -
John Dumelo pays ¢10,400 in outstanding fees for visually impaired law student facing deferral
1 hour -
CHRAJ clears Rev. Kusi Boateng of conflict of interest, says he doesn’t own 2 passports with different names
1 hour