On the occasion of World Hypertension Day 2016, the Novartis Foundation and its partners, including the international nonprofit organization PATH, have announced the launch of the Ho Chi Minh City Communities for Healthy Hearts Program, which is designed to improve health outcomes of adults with hypertension living in low-income households in urban Vietnam.
"I'm extremely pleased we are partnering with the Novartis Foundation to address this significant emerging healthcare challenge in Vietnam," said PATH president and CEO Steve Davis. "We have leveraged our collective expertise in behavior change, health system strengthening, and technology solutions to create a truly innovative and people-centered healthcare model. We hope to see hypertension prevention and control made easy at the community level, for both health workers and patients."
An international nonprofit organization, PATH saves lives, improves health and is a leader in global health innovation. PATH has a 35 year history of partnership in Vietnam.
Carried out in four districts in Ho Chi Minh City, covering a population of approximately two million people, Communities for Healthy Hearts will leverage new approaches to hypertension management by introducing social entrepreneurs to increase access points for cardiovascular health education and screening services. Additionally, the public and private health sectors will collaborate closely in this patient-centered approach to strengthen treatment and referral services. Digital health technology will empower patients in self-management and increase patient-to-provider contact. Learnings from this program will be evaluated to inform expansion of hypertension control efforts in Vietnam.
"We are excited to see our hypertension work extend to Vietnam through an innovative collaborative approach," said Ann Aerts, head of the Novartis Foundation. "As with our Community-based Hypertension Improvement Program (ComHIP) in Ghana, we hope to bring hypertension prevention and detection closer to patients to improve health outcomes and blood pressure control levels in urban settings in a way that is sustainable at scale."
World Hypertension Day brings hypertension care and management into focus; complications from hypertension and high blood pressure account for 9.4 million deaths worldwide every year, this is equivalent to all infectious diseases combined. Nearly 25 per cent of the adult population in Vietnam has hypertension, but less than half of them are aware of their condition. Of those diagnosed with hypertension, only 11 per cent have it under control. In urban areas of Vietnam the prevalence of hypertension is higher at 33%, with Ho Chi Minh City being home to the largest urban population in the country.
The Novartis Foundation is collaborating on Communities for Healthy Hearts with the Ho Chi Minh City's Provincial Health Department, PATH, the Hanoi School of Public Health, and Lotus Impact.