Cardiologists Bob Harrington and Dhruv Kazi discuss the projected burden of cardiovascular disease in 2050, why it's not sustainable, and what can be done to prevent it.
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/1001544?src=soc_yt
--TRANSCRIPT--
Robert A. Harrington, MD: Hi. I am Bob Harrington, from Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City. I'm here in London at the European Society of Cardiology meetings, at theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology booth, using the meetings as an opportunity to meet with colleagues to talk about recent things that they've been writing about.
Today I'm joined by a good friend and colleague, Dr Dhruv Kazi from Beth Israel Deaconess in Boston. Thanks for joining us.
Dhruv S. Kazi, MD, MS: Thank you for having me.
Harrington: Dr Kazi is an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. He's also the associate director of the Smith Center, which is an outcomes research center at the Beth Israel Deaconess. Thanks for joining us.
Kazi: Excited to be here.
Harrington: The topic I think you know that I want to discuss is a really important paper. There are two papers. They're part of the American Heart Association's 100th anniversary celebration, if you will. Many of the papers looked back at where science taken us.
With your co-author, Karen Joynt Maddox, your papers are looking forward. They're about the burden of cardiovascular disease in 2050. One paper really focused on what I would call the clinical and public health issues. Yours is focused on the economics. Is that a good description?
Kazi: Perfect.
Harrington: Tell us what you, Karen, and the other writers set out to do. What were you asked to do?
Kazi: As you know, the American Heart Association is entering its second century. Part of this was an exercise to say, where will the country be in 2050, which is a long enough time horizon for us to start planning for the future. What are the conditions that affect the magnitude of the disease, and the kinds of people who will be affected, that we should be aware of?
We looked back and said, if prior trends remain the same, where will we be in 2050, accounting for changes in demographics, changes in the composition of the population, and knowing that some of the cardiovascular risk factors are getting worse?
Harrington: For me, what was really striking is that, when I first saw the title and read "2050," I thought, Oh, that's a long way away. Then as I started reading it, I realized that this is not so far away.
Kazi: Absolutely.
Harrington: If we're going to make a difference, it might take us 25 years.
Kazi: Especially if we set ourselves ambitious goals, we're going to have to dig deep. Business-as-usual is not going to get us there.
Harrington: No. What I think has happened is we've spent so much time taking care of acute illness. Case fatality rates are fantastic. I was actually making the comment yesterday to a colleague that when I was an intern, the 30-day death rate from acute myocardial infarction was about 20%.
Kazi: Oh, wow.
Harrington: Now it's 5%. That's a big difference in a career.
Transcript in its entirety can be found by clicking here: https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/1001544?src=soc_yt
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/1001544?src=soc_yt
--TRANSCRIPT--
Robert A. Harrington, MD: Hi. I am Bob Harrington, from Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City. I'm here in London at the European Society of Cardiology meetings, at theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology booth, using the meetings as an opportunity to meet with colleagues to talk about recent things that they've been writing about.
Today I'm joined by a good friend and colleague, Dr Dhruv Kazi from Beth Israel Deaconess in Boston. Thanks for joining us.
Dhruv S. Kazi, MD, MS: Thank you for having me.
Harrington: Dr Kazi is an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. He's also the associate director of the Smith Center, which is an outcomes research center at the Beth Israel Deaconess. Thanks for joining us.
Kazi: Excited to be here.
Harrington: The topic I think you know that I want to discuss is a really important paper. There are two papers. They're part of the American Heart Association's 100th anniversary celebration, if you will. Many of the papers looked back at where science taken us.
With your co-author, Karen Joynt Maddox, your papers are looking forward. They're about the burden of cardiovascular disease in 2050. One paper really focused on what I would call the clinical and public health issues. Yours is focused on the economics. Is that a good description?
Kazi: Perfect.
Harrington: Tell us what you, Karen, and the other writers set out to do. What were you asked to do?
Kazi: As you know, the American Heart Association is entering its second century. Part of this was an exercise to say, where will the country be in 2050, which is a long enough time horizon for us to start planning for the future. What are the conditions that affect the magnitude of the disease, and the kinds of people who will be affected, that we should be aware of?
We looked back and said, if prior trends remain the same, where will we be in 2050, accounting for changes in demographics, changes in the composition of the population, and knowing that some of the cardiovascular risk factors are getting worse?
Harrington: For me, what was really striking is that, when I first saw the title and read "2050," I thought, Oh, that's a long way away. Then as I started reading it, I realized that this is not so far away.
Kazi: Absolutely.
Harrington: If we're going to make a difference, it might take us 25 years.
Kazi: Especially if we set ourselves ambitious goals, we're going to have to dig deep. Business-as-usual is not going to get us there.
Harrington: No. What I think has happened is we've spent so much time taking care of acute illness. Case fatality rates are fantastic. I was actually making the comment yesterday to a colleague that when I was an intern, the 30-day death rate from acute myocardial infarction was about 20%.
Kazi: Oh, wow.
Harrington: Now it's 5%. That's a big difference in a career.
Transcript in its entirety can be found by clicking here: https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/1001544?src=soc_yt
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