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Sir Muir Gray: Doing it for ourselves is key to living longer and ageing better

Professor Sir Muir Gray has said there needs to be a radical shift in the way healthcare is perceived if people are to live longer and better.
The public health and ageing expert has said governments and medical institutions like the NHS, need to focus more on disease prevention rather than just being seen as illness management specialists.
Sharing his views on ageing better on the latest Agetech World podcast, Sir Muir has suggested that GPs and the NHS should start prescribing wellness rather than just drugs.
Click here to listen to the latest Agetech World podcast
But the 79-year-old former NHS Chief Knowledge Officer said it’s not just professional services that need to step up and engage more in preventative treatment.
The public is also responsible for taking care of their health by staying physically and mentally active if they want to remain well for longer, in their own home, and out of the hospital system.
Sir Muir, who is a professor in the Nuffield Department of Primary Health Care at the University of Oxford, and a director of the recently launched The Goldster Health Service (GHS) – an online health and wellness club pioneering a systematic non-drug approach to well-being to help deal with the challenges, aspirations, and triumphs of ageing – said being active lies at the heart of his philosophy.
Speaking about the NHS, Sir Muir, who is an internationally renowned authority on healthcare who has advised governments of several countries outside the UK, told the Agetech World podcast: “We need the NHS for three things. For diagnosis. Is it breast cancer, or is it a heart attack, or is it Parkinson’s; for acute care, when you can’t stand and you’re acutely unwell with pneumonia or whatever; and for starting the right treatment.
“So I had a stent put in. They started the treatment right, and they gave me three months attendance at a gym. This was 11 years ago.
“But in the last 11 years, I haven’t had a single word from the NHS about diet or exercise, although I have had a thousand boxes of pills.
“So, what we are seeing now is that self-care is the most important type of care for prevention and for long-term condition management.
“And that’s our mission at Goldster Health Service, to complement and supplement the NHS and to say if you guys can do the diagnosis, acute stay and starting treatment…then after the right treatment has been started it’s up to the citizen to take responsibility.
“I think we need to be much clearer with the public about what their role is and what the role of the NHS is.”

Professor Sir Muir Gray
He suggested a culture change is needed as the NHS has over the past few decades increasingly focused on drugs and technology and people have become more passive about their own health.
“Geriatric medicine’s been wonderful. The speciality of geriatric medicine is very, very important, and it changed the way the medical profession thought. So, we have to be clear what the problem is.
“I have seen 20 reorganisations of the structure of the NHS, but actually structure is only one part of an organisation. You need systems; a system for living longer better, and then culture is even more important than structure.
“You have to be clear that we are trying to change culture.”
Some culture shifts have emerged in recent years, he argued. “It has certainly been very good that people are no longer denied treatment on the basis of their age, but what has happened is that the NHS assumes that every problem of an older person is due to some disease and requires clinical intervention.
“A result of this is what is called polypharmacy, people on numerous drugs. There is something called hyper-polypharmacy, where people have more than 10 drugs.
“Now, drugs are very important. I’m on six drugs a day for my various heart and other health problems, and I value them highly, but a very large number of people in their 80s and 90s are on eight, or nine, or 10 drugs a day, and it is estimated that 10% of those drugs do no good.”
The NHS is this year marking its 75th anniversary. Founded in July 1948, it was the first free at the point of delivery, universal health system available to all. Currently the NHS treats over a million people each day in England alone.
Whilst congratulating the NHS on the milestone, Sir Muir commented: “In 1948, the National Assistance Act, and the National Health Service Act, said that young disabled people….were to be given education to overcome their disabilities; the aged were to be given practical assistance. Don’t worry about it, just do things for them.
“But that is partly a failure to understand the biology of what is happening to us. So, our mission (at GHS) is a cultural revolution, really, as well as giving information to people, to support individuals.
“We are clear we have to change what other people think, because, I think it was Sartre who said, ‘hell is other people,’; we have to change how other people think as well as changing how older people think.”
He continued: “Our job in Goldster is clearly cultural revolution. Supposing I was in Manchester, or Paris, or Gateshead, speaking to a group of either the public or professionals, I would tell them, ‘I am going to rewire your brains. You are thinking the wrong way.’
“We know that your brain can be rewired at any age. You sometimes see a man or a woman down at the end of the road in that big green box with telephone wires. It’s amazing how they join them together. That is what we are going to do to your brains.
“We are very clear that we are in the brain rewiring business. So, giving people knowledge, for example, saying that ageing by itself is not a cause of problems, major problems until the late-90s, that’s knowledge.”
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Gut-friendly foods may damage heart, charity warns
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Diabetes patients face increased risk of undiagnosed heart failure

People with diabetes may have undiagnosed heart failure that could be detected by a simple screening blood test, research suggests.
The TARTAN-HF trial found that one in four patients with diabetes who had at least one other risk factor for heart failure had undiagnosed heart failure detected through screening with a blood test and ultrasound scanning of the heart.
Experts said the findings show the extent of unrecognised heart failure in people with diabetes, and how the condition can be detected using a widely available blood test called NT-proBNP, which measures how much strain the heart is under.
They suggest a heart failure screening programme for diabetics could improve diagnosis rates, lead to earlier treatment and potentially reduce the risk of hospitalisation and death.
The study, involving 700 patients, was led by the University of Glasgow in collaboration with AstraZeneca, Roche Diagnostics, Us2.ai, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and NHS Lanarkshire.
Dr Kieran Docherty, clinical senior lecturer at the University of Glasgow’s School of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Health, said: “Our results from the landmark TARTAN-HF trial identified heart failure in a large proportion of people living with diabetes, emphasising the need for a heart failure screening strategy in this group of patients.
“We know that many of the symptoms and signs of heart failure are non-specific, and may go unrecognised as potentially being due to heart failure for a long time.
“The strategy used in our trial is simple and easy to implement in clinical practice, and will aid in the early identification of heart failure in people with diabetes, and facilitate the initiation of medications that we know improve outcomes in patients with heart failure.”
The study, which began more than three years ago, involved more than 700 people with diabetes from the two health board areas who had at least one other risk factor for heart failure.
They were randomly assigned either to receive heart failure screening or to continue with their usual care.
Researchers found screening uncovered a large number of previously unrecognised cases of heart failure. Around one in four, or 24.9 per cent, of those screened were found to have the condition within six months, compared with 1 per cent in the group continuing their usual care.
The study, involving patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, found almost all of the participants found to have heart failure had preserved ejection fraction, which can be difficult to detect without dedicated testing.
The findings of the TARTAN-HF trial were presented at the American College of Cardiology conference taking place from 28 to 30 March in New Orleans in the US.
Dr Edward Piper, medical director at AstraZeneca UK, said: “Delayed diagnosis and treatment of heart failure in people with type 2 diabetes contributes to poor long-term outcomes. TARTAN-HF demonstrates that targeted, risk-based screening can identify previously undiagnosed heart failure in approximately one in four high-risk patients with diabetes, enabling earlier intervention with guideline-directed therapy.”
Dr Christian Simon, head of global medical affairs at Roche Diagnostics, said: “We are proud to have supported the landmark TARTAN-HF trial. These findings demonstrate the transformative power of early, accessible diagnostics like the NT-proBNP blood test.
“By identifying unrecognised heart failure in people with diabetes, we enable clinicians to initiate appropriate treatments sooner, ultimately improving patient outcomes and lives.”
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UK government announces £6.3m fund to boost men’s health

The UK has launched a £6.3m men’s health fund to back local projects aimed at helping men and boys live longer, healthier lives.
The Men’s Health Community Fund is a partnership between the Department of Health and Social Care, Movember and People’s Health Trust.
The government is contributing £3m, while the two charities are more than doubling that to take the total to £6.3m.
Grants will support community projects reaching underserved men and boys aged 16 and over, particularly in the most disadvantaged areas and at key points in their lives such as becoming a father, losing a job or retiring.
Projects could include support for new fathers, activities for men facing loneliness and social isolation, services to help young men engage with the health system, and support for men in work, out of work and moving into retirement.
The programme will bring together voluntary, community and social enterprise organisations to test new ways of reaching men who are least likely to use traditional health services.
An evaluation funded through the National Institute for Health and Care Research will assess what works and help inform future policy and delivery.
Health and social care secretary Wes Streeting said: “Too many men across the country are living shorter, less healthy lives, particularly those in our most disadvantaged communities.
“This new partnership will help men get the support they need in the places they feel most comfortable, their communities, among people they trust.
“By working with expert charities and local organisations, we can reach the men who are too often missed by traditional services and help them take better care of their mental and physical health.”
“It is a key step in delivering our first ever Men’s Health Strategy and driving forward our ambition to halve the gap in healthy life expectancy between the richest and poorest areas.”
The Men’s Health Strategy sets out plans to tackle the physical and mental health challenges men and boys face.
Men can be less likely to seek help and more likely to suffer in silence, while higher rates of smoking, drinking, gambling and drug use are damaging men’s health and affecting families, workplaces and communities.
The government is also investing £3.6m over the next three years in suicide prevention projects for middle-aged men in local communities across areas of England where men are most at risk, many of which are also among the most deprived. Suicide is one of the biggest killers of men under 50, and three-quarters of all suicides are men.
The projects will aim to break down barriers middle-aged men face in seeking support, including stigma around asking for help and a lack of awareness of what is available and how to access it.
They will be co-designed with experts and men with lived experience of mental health crises and suicidal thoughts.
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