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HOLY ANGEL UNIVERSITY

High School Department


#1 Holy Angel Avenue, Sto. Rosario, Angeles City

ACTIVITY SHEETS

Name ___________________________________________ Grade/Score _______________


Year and Section ____________________________ Date ______________________
Subject: GRADE 11 – Earth and Life Science Physical Sciences
ACTIVITY: (Please check the appropriate box)
Concept Notes Laboratory Report Formal Theme Journal
Skills/Drill/Exercise Drawing/Art/Plate Informal Theme Quiz
Others ___________

ACTIVITY TITLE: Article Analysis No.1


LEARNING TARGET:

Cardiovascular disease is still the country’s top killer


By: Anne A. Jambora, Philippine Daily Inquirer / 12:34 AM December 02, 2014

Rising mortality rates prompt cardiologists to release updated guidelines on managing the illness–
including getting treatment for a heart attack within a six-hour window

Each year, 170,000 Filipinos die from cardiovascular diseases, up from 85,000 more than 20 years ago, according to a
2009 study by the Department of Health.

inRead invented by Teads


That’s a mortality rate way more than those caused by typhoons that hit the country every year. Yet, like a thief in the
night, cardiovascular disease quietly sneaks into our homes and hospital beds, snuffing the life out of 19 Filipinos each
hour.

These are the deaths that do not make headlines, but diseases of the heart and the vascular system have remained the
top two causes of death in the country since 1993.

The alarming rise in death rate attributed to cardiovascular diseases has prompted the Philippine Heart Association
(PHA) to release an updated guideline on treating and managing heart disease in the book, “2014 Philippine Clinical
Practice Guidelines for the Management of Coronary Heart Disease,” now available on print and soon to be released as a
downloadable e-book on PHA’s website.

The book—written by experts in the fields, with some entries borrowed from the world’s most respected guidelines such
as the American College of Cardiology and the European Society of Cardiology—will address specifically the scope and
limitations of heart heath care in the Philippines.

Strongly recommended

It is written by doctors for general practitioners, family physicians, ER doctors, nurses, internists, cardiologists and other
medical personnel, with the latest proven recommendations classified as “strongly recommended,” “recommended,” and
“may be recommended” for specific treatments and modalities.

“So many times these are easily forgotten; that’s why some medical practitioners carry guidelines in their pocket. If you
don’t have a guideline, that would be like not having a roadmap when traveling. You may reach the destination, but you
are unaware that there are better ways to get there. Sometimes you can even get lost—at the risk of the patient’s life,”
said Dr. Joel M. Abanilla, PHA president.

Think of the guideline akin to an ER triage in which, upon suspicion of a heart attack, the attending medical team can
accurately differentiate the three major coronary arteries, and are more confident and knowledgeable in making critical
decisions.

“Anyone of you can have a heart attack. This is a very deadly disease. Mortality rate for a heart attack that is poorly
managed is very high. This guideline is all about improving the quality of health care we have in the Philippines,” Abanilla
said.
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is caused by plaque buildup, cholesterol deposits that narrow the coronary arteries, or
blood vessels in your heart. This buildup happens through the course of several years. When arteries become hardened
and narrowed, limiting and constricting the amount of oxygen that flows into the heart, a heart attack may occur.

THE BOOK is written by experts in the fields and will specifically address the scope and limitations of heart healthcare in
the Philippines.
THE BOOK is written by experts in the fields and will specifically address the scope and limitations of heart healthcare in
the Philippines.

“At age 20, our arteries are smooth; there would still be no blockage detected. Then it starts to build up. As we grow
older, cholesterol deposits go to blood vessels, and the plaque grows bigger. If we are neglectful, we start to feel its
symptoms,” said Dr. Victor L. Lazaro, PHA chair.

If your chest hurts

One of CAD’s symptoms is a chest pain that is exacerbated with activity. If your chest hurts after strenuous physical
activity, the kind of pain that refuses to go away minutes after you’ve supposedly properly rested, then chances are you
have CAD.

Other symptoms include shortness of breath, fatigue and heart attack. Heart attack usually exhibits symptoms of a
crushing pressure in the chest, pain in the arm or shoulder, and sweating. For some women, they may experience back or
jaw pain and nausea.

When heart attack occurs with no symptoms at all, it’s called myocardial ischemia. This is typically what happens to
endurance athletes, a condition that occurs when blood flow to the heart is decreased by blockage in the coronary
arteries. This is why, Lazaro said, even health buffs must get themselves routinely checked for coronary diseases.

There are nonmodifiable and modifiable factors that contribute to CAD. Nonmodifiable includes aging. Your risk for CAD
increases as you age. For males, CAD is developed between 40 and 45 years old; for females, it’s between 50 and 55
years old, Lazaro said.

“When females reach menopause, their chances of developing CAD will equal that of the male,” Lazaro said. However,
the modern lifestyle of women is now closing in that gap. Other nonmodifiable factors include family history.

Lifesaver

Lifestyle modifications, said Lazaro, can be a lifesaver. Modifiable factors include smoking, sedentary lifestyle, obesity,
uncontrolled hypertension, high cholesterol, and mental stress and depression.

“We need a new way to prevent deaths from happening. We need guidelines to lessen the incidents of heart disease or
deaths from heart diseases, and create a healthier society,” Lazaro said.

If detected early, heart attacks can be significantly less fatal. Abanilla said if patients know that they have to seek
treatment within the six-hour therapeutic window, and the medical team attending to them knows what to do, then their
chances of surviving will improve.

The problem here is most people seek medical attention after experiencing symptoms for at least two hours. With the
kind of traffic we have in the metropolis, said Abanilla, these patients might lose their therapeutic window. This is even
made worse if the patient happens to be whisked to the hospital by an improperly equipped ambulance.

“We want people to know that there are options. There are antithrombotics that you can give outright, even in the
ambulance or ER, that can improve survival by as much as 20 percent. What happens is when patients go to the hospital,
these agents may not even be available. The staff is not aware of their importance,” Abanilla said.

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