The Increased Risk of Falls with Blood Pressure Medication
Are blood pressure pills doing more harm than good? Plus, the pilot programme of mobile phone verbal autopsies in Malawi, and the risks and benefits of breast cancer screening.
At least 60% of adults over the age of 65 in industrialised countries are taking medication to lower their high blood pressure. The idea is to protect them against heart attacks and stroke, but for the average elderly person, new research has found that taking these pills increases your risk of having a serious fall. Although the benefits of low blood pressure outweigh the risks of a fall if people are otherwise healthy, it has been discovered that for those with other diseases, blood pressure pills do not actually reduce the risk of having a cardiovascular event. Mary Tinetti, Professor of Geriatric Medicine at Yale Medical School is the author of this new research, which has just been published in the American journal Internal Medicine and PLOS ONE.
Mobile Phone Autopsies
As many as two thirds of deaths that occur in the world go unrecorded. In Malawi, there is no official record of deaths that occur outside a medical facility, making it difficult to plan and budget for health services. But a new system of using mobile phones to conduct what are known as 'verbal autopsies' is going to create the country’s first database of deaths and causes. The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ’s Anne Soy reports from the district of Mchinji in central Malawi.
Systematic Mammography
In most high income countries, women between 50-70 years old are invited to go for screening for breast cancer every two to three years. Over the years, eight large randomised controlled trials have reviewed the data and tried to work out how many lives this screening saves. The Swiss Medical Board has just reviewed these trials and is recommending that no new screening programmes be set up in Switzerland. And a large Canadian study has recently been published in the British Medical Journal and finds that mammography makes little difference to breast cancer mortality.
But Professor Stephen Duffy, from Queen Mary University of London, has published his own review of the reviews - and along with other reviews of the trials they come to a rather different conclusion. So what are women to think? Is it worth going for breast screening? Health Check brought together Professor Duffy with Dr Christian Weber, one of the authors of the Swiss Medical Board’s report.
(Photo: Elderly couple. Credit: Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty Images)
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Blood pressure pills
Are they doing more harm than good?
Duration: 07:22
Mobile phone autopsies in Malawi
A new pilot programme to record causes of death in children
Duration: 04:18
Systematic mammography
The risks and benefits of breast cancer screening programmes
Duration: 13:39
Broadcasts
- Wed 12 Mar 2014 20:32GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Thu 13 Mar 2014 02:32GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Thu 13 Mar 2014 09:32GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
- Sun 16 Mar 2014 05:32GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
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Health Check
Health issues and medical breakthroughs from around the world.