Reducing the Burden of Cardiovascular Disease in Brazil

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Reducing the Burden of Cardiovascular Disease in Brazil

Health

Author: Isabelle Gagnon-Arpin, Junyi Feng

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Heart attacks and strokes are common complications of cardiovascular disease (CVD). They happen more often in people with specific risk factors, such as smoking or type 2 diabetes. People with a history of CVD or who suffer from a genetic predisposition to high cholesterol levels are particularly vulnerable to heart attacks and strokes. By reaching World Health Organization risk factor reduction targets, Brazil could gain US$28.5 billion in health care cost and productivity savings between 2016 and 2035 and could also save up to US$43.8 billion by helping high-risk groups lower their cholesterol levels.

Faced with rising health expenditures and an aging population, policy-makers need to act urgently. There is uncertainty, however, around which interventions may yield the biggest health and economic impacts. Reducing the Burden of Cardiovascular Disease in Brazil fills in some of this knowledge by assessing the impact of two very different, yet complementary, CVD reduction strategies.

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Which interventions may yield the biggest health and economic impacts on cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Brazil? This issue briefing assesses the impact of two different, yet complementary, CVD reduction strategies.

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