Our stroke associations have a lot of work to do and its not F.A.S.T. Ask yours whats the comparison of immediate deaths from stroke to 30-day deaths. That is where they should be focusing - stopping the neuronal cascade of death. Why am I not in charge? Is everybody else incompetent?
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/one-in-four-deaths-today-due-to-heart-disease-stroke-says-study/1045138/
Non-communicable diseases like cancer, diabetes and heart disease
killed two out of three people in 2010 — a larger share than in 1990,
when they were responsible for every second death in the world.
Of the 52.8 million people who died worldwide in 2010, ischaemic
heart disease and stroke accounted for 12.9 million, or 24 per cent. Two
decades ago, in 1990, IHD killed 9.9 million people, which was around a
fifth of all deaths that year. Eight million people died of cancer in
2010, which was almost 38 per cent more than the 5.8 million who died of
the disease in 1990.
Results of the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study 2010,
published in The Lancet on Thursday, show heart disease and stroke
continue to be the top two killers worldwide.
Deaths from road traffic injuries have increased 50 per cent
between 1990 and 2010. Blood pressure is currently the biggest risk
factor for disease worldwide, followed by tobacco, alcohol and poor
diet.
Infectious diseases, maternal and child illness, and malnutrition
cause fewer deaths than they did 20 years ago, but more young adults
and middle-aged people are suffering and dying from disease and injury
now. The forces of nature are playing a more important role in causing
deaths worldwide, the study found.
The study, which has taken over five years and involved 486
authors in 50 countries, comprises seven articles on various aspects of
death, disability and life expectancy. This the first systematic and
comprehensive assessment of global data on disease, injuries and risk
since the first GBD study was commissioned by the World Bank in 1990. It
was led by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University
of Washington.
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