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New documentary to highlight devastating impact of Rheumatic Heart Disease amid First Nations people
Media release: 22 February, 2023
The Heart Foundation hopes a new documentary exploring the devastating impact of Rheumatic Heart Disease (RHD) on Australia’s First Nations people will rally more public support to end its spread and protect future generations.
The Heart Foundation’s First Nations Heart Health team including Professor Sandra Eades and Vicki Wade are urging Australians to learn more about RHD by watching the recently aired national television premier of documentary Take Heart Deadly Heart.
Both Prof Eades and Ms Wade are proud women of the Noongar Nation and two of Australia’s most respected and experienced First Nations health experts.
Together, they are leading the development of the Heart Foundation’s First Nations Heart Health Strategy. Supporting research and innovation to end RHD will be a key focus of the Heart Foundation’s new strategy when launched later this year.
Ms Wade co-produced Take Heart Deadly Heart and said an important first step to ending RHD was to help Australians understand the problem so they could take action to support efforts to end it.
“Many Australians still do not know what RHD is. Older Australians may recall it being around in the 1950s but since then it has been eliminated in the mainstream population. The sad thing is that it is now almost entirely seen in First Nations communities in Australia, with some of the rates being the highest in the world,” Ms Wade said.
“This is because it is rarely found in developed nations, and less so in urbanised areas where people have access to clean water and generally better living conditions.”
Professor Eades said living standards in remote communities allowed infections of Streptococcus A – which cause RHD - to flourish.
“Repeated Strep A infection can cause the immune system to overreact, leading to acute rheumatic fever (ARF),” Prof Eades said.
“This can then go on to injure the valves of the heart, progressing to the irreversible and life-threatening condition of Rheumatic Heart Disease.
“There are over 9,000 people in Australia with ARF or RHD and sadly nearly 80 percent of these are within Australia’s First Nations population.
“RHD causes permanent and irreversible damage which tragically shortens or reduces the quality of life of those affected. In the case of First Nations people, RHD mostly impacts women and children.”
Ms Wade said the main take away for all Australians is that RHD is entirely preventable.
“By watching Take Heart Deadly Heart you’ll see just how preventable this terrible disease is, and how much better life could be for our First Nations peoples if we bring RHD to and end.”
RHD continues to disproportionately affect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples. So why are the rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples suffering from RHD so high?
Rheumatic heart disease is a serious disease that causes damage to your heart valves.
Australian guidelines for prevention, diagnosis and management of acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease.
Last updated22 February 2023