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Kathy Brown Senior Director Kathy Brown Senior Director

Kathy Brown Senior Director - PowerPoint Presentation

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Kathy Brown Senior Director - PPT Presentation

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Branch Queensland Health RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE A plan of action for Queensland While acute rheumatic fever has become a rare curiosity in Australias nonIndigenous population its incidence in Indigenous Australians living in remote areas rema ID: 933034

rheumatic rhd arf indigenous rhd rheumatic indigenous arf heart register fever queensland health action plan disease clinical control islander

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Kathy Brown

Senior DirectorAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health BranchQueensland Health

RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASEA plan of action for Queensland

“While acute rheumatic fever has become a rare curiosity in Australia’s non-Indigenous population, its incidence in Indigenous Australians living in remote areas remains among the highest reported in the world. It is unlikely that such a stark contrast between two populations living within the same national borders exists for any other disease or on any other continent.”

Alex Brown, Malcolm McDonald, Tom

Calma

Slide2

The Rheumatic Heart Disease pathway

Diagnosis

should be based on assessment of symptoms combined with clinical history. Rheumatic Heart Disease occurs when untreated, recurrent ARF episodes cause heart valve damage.Recurrence rate of ARF is greatest in first year after first episode. Social determinants such as poor living conditions are key drivers for onset of ARF and RHD.

Acute Rheumatic Fever

is an autoimmune response to a group A streptococcus (GAS) bacterial infection.

Misdiagnosis

occurs due to complexity of diagnosis may result in delayed or no treatment.

Symptoms

such as fever, joint pain, sore throats and rashes are non-specific to the infection.

Slide3

Acute Rheumatic Fever and Rheumatic Heart Disease in Queensland

Indigenous

Non-Indigenous

Queensland CVD Burden by condition, age and Indigenous status (2011)

88 percent

The proportion of ARF notifications (total

1,151

) for Indigenous Queenslanders (

1,018

)

between 1999 and 2017

1,055

The number of Indigenous Queenslanders with RHD currently listed on the Queensland RHD Register

at July 2017

169 times

The prevalence rate of RHD for Indigenous Australians compared with non-Indigenous Australians

at December 2015

12 years

The median age for onset of ARF for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous Queenslanders

RHD Register data

Slide4

Rheumatic Heart Policy Framework

National

Rheumatic Fever Strategy (2009) – State-based register and control programs; education and training resources; data collection. Evaluation of the RHS (2017) – Support an increased awareness of ARF and RHD among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Queenslanders.National Partnership Agreement on Rheumatic Fever Strategy (2017-18) – Commonwealth funding continued for three years (2017–18 to 2020–21). QueenslandQueensland RHD Register and Control Program – State-based register and recall system, improved clinical care, education and training, data collection.Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Rheumatic Heart Disease Action Plan 2018–2021

Slide5

Rheumatic Heart Disease Action Plan 2018-2021

$4.5 million

(over 3 years from 2018-19)New funding has been earmarked for activities under the RHD Action Plan:Support an increased awareness of ARF and RHD among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander QueenslandersIncreased education for communities and clinicians on identifying the early symptoms of ARF and the important of early treatmentFoster clinical knowledge on ARF and RHD across the health workforce, to support early diagnosis and treatmentEnhance the Queensland RHD Register and Control Program to enable stronger linkages with acute cardiology services.

Slide6

Priorities under the RHD Action Plan

Promote, prevent, empower

Ensure patients have the information they need and enable them to make the best decisions on their health.Improve the patient experienceProvide patients with a comfortable clinical experience, coordinated streamlined service delivery and positive engagement with health care providers.Strengthen the approachWork cohesively to establish new relationships and partnerships with health service providers, and build on existing ones.Foster clinical knowledgeEnable health professionals to appropriately prevent, diagnose and manage ARF and RHD.

Enhance the Queensland RHD Register and Control Program

Enable the Register to fully meet the needs of patients, other stakeholders and the requirements of the Rheumatic Fever Strategy and the Action Plan.

Slide7

Questions?