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There are 3447 result(s) for coronary disease mortality
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Take 10 minutes to change your life this Heart Month
February is Heart Month and this year we’re urging people to take at least 10 minutes a day to help improve their own heart health as well as support our annual fundraiser, Wear it. Beat it.
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Is a heart attack hereditary?
If someone in your family has a heart attack, are you at risk too? Our nurses explain.
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RESEARCH
Using patient data to improve treatment and care for heart attack patientsUniversity of Leeds | Professor Christopher Gale
Dr Chris Gale and colleagues from the University of Leeds will spend two years creating the world’s largest research database of information about heart attacks. They will do this by linking together, for the first time, existing databases ...
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Taking action on air pollution in Northern Ireland
Air pollution is linked to heart and circulatory diseases and deaths in Northern Ireland. This is why we're campaigning for action on air pollution.
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Scientists to improve heart attack treatment by blocking heart damaging molecules
Scientists in Cambridge are to investigate how the treatment of heart attacks could be improved by blocking heart damaging molecules called free radicals.
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RESEARCH
How does a diabetes medicine protect against heart attacks?University of Oxford | Professor Charalambos Antoniades
Liraglutide is a medicine that’s used to help control blood sugar in people with type 2 diabetes. However, a recent study revealed that Liraglutide also cuts the risk of heart attacks in diabetic people. A heart attack occurs when fatty p...
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European Heart Network appoints BHF CEO as President
Our Chief Executive Dr Charmaine Griffiths has been announced as the new President of the European Heart Network (EHN).
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Artificial intelligence for heart attack prediction
Artificial intelligence (AI) can help identify people at high risk of a fatal heart attack years before it strikes – thanks to new research that we've funded.
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Ambulances should take cardiac arrest patients to closest emergency department
People who have an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest should be taken straight to their nearest emergency department, according to research we’ve funded presented today at the European Society of Cardiology Congress in Amsterdam and published in The Lancet.