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British Heart Foundation
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University of Oxford
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* Mortality from heart failure *
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National mortality statistics for heart failure

 

In 2001, just over 11,500 deaths due to heart failure were officially recorded in the UK. However, the number of deaths attributed to heart failure in national mortality statistics is likely to be a huge underestimate of the actual number of deaths caused by heart failure. Guidance on death certificates - that heart failure is not a cause but a mode of death – explicitly discourages doctors from noting heart failure as the underlying cause of death. This means that other causes of death, such as coronary heart disease, are more commonly given as the cause of death in the death certificates of people with heart failure.

 

 

Survival after a diagnosis of heart failure

 

Prognosis from heart failure is poor. Data from the London Heart Failure Study show that around 40% of people die within one year of an initial diagnosis of heart failure.

 

Comparing one-year survival rates for heart failure with those for a number of common cancers shows that prognosis from heart failure is relatively poor. The one-year survival rate for heart failure is worse than those for breast, prostate and bladder cancer, better than those for lung and stomach cancer, and very similar to that for cancer of the colon.

 

 

Better estimates of mortality from heart failure

Combining data on incidence and survival, we estimate1 that in 2001, the true number of deaths from heart failure in the UK was at least 24,000. This means at least 4% of all deaths in the UK are due to heart failure.

 

 

1. From incidence rates in the Hillingdon Heart Failure Study we estimate that there are just around 63,500 new cases of heart failure each year in the UK. Applying a 62% one-year survival rate to this figure, means that just over 24,100 of those diagnosed from heart failure die within a calendar year.

 

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* The following downloads are available on this topic *
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* Deaths from heart failure, by sex and age and country, 2001, UK (Table)
Sources: Office for National Statistics (2002); General Register Office (2002)Edinburgh; General Register Office (2002) Northern Ireland.
 
Microsoft Excel Sheet - Deaths from heart failure, by sex and age and country, 2001, UK (Table)
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* Survival after initial diagnosis of heart failure, around 2002, London (Table)
Source: London Heart Failure Study (2005), personal communication.
 
Microsoft Excel Sheet - Survival after initial diagnosis of heart failure, around 2002, London (Table)
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* Number of new cases and survival rates for heart failure and the major cancers compared, 1996, England and Wales (Table)
Sources: Cancer Trends in England and Wales 1950-1999 (2001) ONS; Cowie MR et al (2000) Heart.
 
Microsoft Excel Sheet - Number of new cases and survival rates for heart failure and the major cancers compared, 1996, England and Wales (Table)
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* One-year survival rates, heart failure and the major cancers compared, mid-1990's, England and Wales (Figure)
Sources: Cancer Trends in England and Wales 1950-1999 (2001)ONS; Cowie MR et al (2000) Heart.
 
Microsoft Excel Sheet - One-year survival rates, heart failure and the major cancers compared, mid-1990's, England and Wales  (Figure)Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation - One-year survival rates, heart failure and the major cancers compared, mid-1990's, England and Wales  (Figure)
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  Page last updated : 15th May 2006
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