Still totally fucking useless, we have NO leadership in stroke that will direct this work to be done. This is just lips flapping in the breeze!
A real chance to reduce death and disability from stroke
Published:August, 2024DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(24)00283-7
Stroke
remains a major cause of death and disability worldwide, despite
developments such as thrombolysis and endovascular thrombectomy. As
highlighted at the 77th World Health Assembly (WHA) on May 27, 2024, in a
side-event
organised by the World Stroke Organization (WSO), stroke prevention and
care(NOT RECOVERY!) need to improve. Guidance for policy makers on how they can tackle
this challenge and reduce the burden of stroke, along with that of
other neurological disorders, has been developed by WHO as an
Implementation Toolkit to accompany their Intersectoral Global Action Plan on Epilepsy and Other Neurological Disorders 2022–2031 (IGAP).
By making neurological disorders, including stroke, a higher priority,
policy makers(We need DOERS INSTEAD!) have an excellent opportunity to save and improve the
lives of many people.
Stroke is estimated
to have caused more than 7 million deaths in 2021, when it was the
third leading cause of death after ischaemic heart disease and COVID-19.
According to the WSO–Lancet Neurology Commission,
the number of deaths caused by stroke is expected to rise to nearly 10
million in 2050, and about 90% of these deaths are expected to occur in
low-income or middle-income countries. Among neurological disorders,
stroke is already the leading cause of disease burden, assessed as
disability-adjusted life years, globally and in almost all regions.
Total global direct and indirect costs of stroke
were estimated to be around US$900 billion in 2017, possibly reaching
more than US$1500 billion by 2050. But, according to WSO, “We have the
ability to change this.”
The WSO event—entitled United in Action to Transform care(NOT RECOVERY!)—was
the first ever WHA satellite session dedicated specifically to stroke.
Its aim was to raise awareness(WHAT FUCKING BULLSHIT! At a minimum lay out a strategy to get stroke solved to 100% recovery!) of the burden of stroke among policy
makers, to highlight advances in treatment and their potential health
and economic benefits, and to argue for the role of stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) in
achieving health for all, echoing the theme of the 77th WHA: All for Health, Health for All.
The WSO event report makes five recommendations for policy makers: to
assess gaps and prioritise stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) in global, national, and regional
health plans; to invest in infrastructure to support services,
including thrombolysis and thrombectomy; to increase skills in the
workforce; to ensure that payment structures can support
state-of-the-art stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!); and to build a strategy to apply savings
related to state-of-the-art acute stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) downstream in health
systems.
State-of-the-art acute
stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) with thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy have proven
benefits for many people with stroke and, since 2023, have been included
in the WHO list of cost-effective interventions for noncommunicable diseases; endovascular thrombectomy has a has a number needed to treat to reduce disability of 2·6, and improved blood pressure control
could avert 120 million strokes between 2023 and 2050. Yet, according
to WSO, many of these chances to avert stroke or improve outcomes are
not being taken, for reasons that vary between countries and can include
scarcity of specialist health-care professionals and equipment, and
logistical issues such as distances to specialist centres.
The WSO event, the WSO–Lancet Neurology
Commission, and the WHO Implementation Toolkit all suggest practical
ways in which stroke prevention and services might be improved. The
Implementation Toolkit is intended to help WHO Member States meet the
targets of the IGAP and promotes an integrated approach, in terms of
considering all neurological disorders and working across health policy
and services, given that people often have multiple conditions that
share risk factors. The Implementation Toolkit not only provides broad
advice, such as on how to engage with stakeholders, including those with
lived experience, and how to do a situational analysis, but also
presents disorder-specific approaches. For stroke, the recommended
actions cover policy (eg, addressing national capacity for prevention,
prioritising stroke in budgets, integrating stroke into social and
development agendas, and raising public awareness), clinical care(NOT RECOVERY!) (eg,
establishing national guidelines for acute treatment, ensuring provision
of neuroimaging and neurosurgical facilities, and establishing
rehabilitation services), prevention (eg, promoting brain health
throughout life, including reducing hypertension), and research.
With the call to action from WSO and new guidance from WHO, in addition to recommendations in the WSO–Lancet Neurology
Commission, policy makers have an ideal opportunity to reduce the
burden and costs of stroke in their countries and regions, and to
prevent many deaths and much disability. The burden of neurological
disorders, and particularly stroke, must be reduced if we are to achieve
“health for all”.
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