European And Brazilian Cardiologists Cooperate To Reduce Cardiovascular Deaths
Main Category:
Heart Disease
Also Included In:
Cardiovascular / Cardiology
Article Date: 14 Sep 2011 - 1:00 PDT
The European Society of Cardiology (ESC) is to deliver an
educational programme at the 66th Annual Congress of the
Brazilian Society of Cardiology. This meeting is the largest
cardiology conference in Latin America and will be held in Porto
Alegre, Brazil from 16 to 19 September 2011. The Brazilian
Society of Cardiology is an affiliated society of the ESC and
has around 13,000 members.
Sophia Antipolis, 12 September, 2011: Against a background of
high mortality rates from cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Brazil,
the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) is to deliver an
educational programme at the 66th Annual Congress of the
Brazilian Society of Cardiology. This meeting is the largest
cardiology conference in Latin America and will be held in Porto
Alegre, Brazil from 16 to 19 September 2011. The Brazilian
Society of Cardiology is an affiliated society of the ESC and
has around 13,000 members.
With international collaboration a key objective of the ESC's
Global Scientific Activities (GSA) Committee, it has organised a
senior ESC faculty to present a series of papers in a dedicated
one-day session jointly chaired with the host society. The ESC's
educational programme¹ is structured to provide an overview of
recent congresses and an insight into new and updated Clinical
Guidelines. ESC experts will also summarise the Ivabradine SHIFT
trial and discuss the implications for treating ischemic heart
disease; review relevant case studies to illustrate clinical
experience, and host an Atrial Fibrillation symposium.
The ESC will be represented by its President, Professor Michel
Komajda, along with members of the ESC Board, and a number of
eminent cardiologists that include authors of its most recent
Guidelines. Professor Komajda firmly believes that CVD should be
tackled as a global challenge rather than a series of regional
issues. "I am proud of this joint initiative in which
cardiologists from Brazil and the ESC countries will share their
experiences and discuss clinical cases and ESC Guidelines," he
says. "This kind of exchange between peers from different
geographic regions is the best way to create a truly
international cardiology community, and will build on a long
history of successful cooperation between the ESC and the
Brazilian Society of Cardiology."
Mortality rates from CVD in Brazil are the highest in Latin
America, and are around double the European average². At least
50% of the population over the age of 60 have
hypertension and
25% of all hospitalisations in this age group are CVD-related.
In addition, Brazil is facing worrying trends that point to an
increase in
diabetes and widespread
obesity. This raises the
possibility that the nation's CVD profile is following the
European pattern and underlines the rationale for a closer
relationship with the ESC.
In recent years, the Brazilian Society of Cardiology has
actively sought greater international collaboration. Over 700
Brazilian cardiologists attended the ESC Congress 2010 in
Stockholm, while its members have recently submitted in excess
of 400 abstracts for the 2011 event in Paris. Jorge Ilha
Guimarães is President of the Brazilian Society of Cardiology. "We
have established professional exchanges with the ESC in several
specialty topics," he says. "Now we are preparing for even
closer cooperation in other areas such as integrating surveys
and registries. It is our wish to create closer scientific and
friendly ties with the ESC."
The ESC's GSA Committee was established to meet demand for ESC
science and knowledge outside of Europe, to build closer ties
with international cardiology organisations, and to extend the
ESC mission beyond its traditional borders. In what has been a
busy year, the GSA Committee has delivered education programmes
at both the Saudi Heart Association conference in Riyadh and the
Asia Pacific Congress of Cardiology in Kuala Lumpur, and has
been invited to participate in similar meetings in Argentina,
China and Mexico over the next three months.
"We are very happy to make a contribution to the Brazilian
Congress," notes Professor Fausto Pinto, the ESC Vice-President
responsible for National Societies and Affiliated Societies, and
a member of the GSA Committee. "While there is huge demand for
the ESC to share its Guidelines, training and knowledge, there
is undoubtedly much for us to learn as well."
Fonte:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/234345.php |