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Warne's ultimate legacy saving lives
Warne's ultimate legacy saving lives

Perth Now

time10 hours ago

  • Health
  • Perth Now

Warne's ultimate legacy saving lives

Shane Warne will be remembered as one of Australia's all-time sporting greats – but his greatest legacy may be saving thousands of lives. The spin king died suddenly of a heart attack while holidaying in Thailand in March 2022. His death shocked the nation and untold millions of cricket lovers across the globe. But it also spurred the launch of the Shane Warne Legacy, which over the summer rolled out a national heart health screening initiative. The foundation hopes that Warne's untimely death can be a catalyst for change and help Australians identify the warning signs. As part of the initiative, over 76,000 Australians were screened at pharmacies across the country and the Boxing Day Test. The results of the Monash University-led study, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, have revealed that seven out of 10 Australians screened had at least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. 'They identified thousands of Australians at risk, many of whom hadn't had a blood pressure check in the past year,' Dr Sean Tan said. 'Meeting people where they are, whether that's at their local pharmacy or the MCG, can make all the difference to health outcomes.' The checks found that just shy of 69 per cent of people had a risk factor for heart disease such as elevated blood pressure, being overweight or obese, or smoking. Shane Warne's daughters Brooke and Summer Warne with one of the check up machines at the MCG. NewsWire / Andrew Henshaw Credit: News Corp Australia It also found half of the people with high blood pressure hadn't had a check in the last year. Helen Nolan, Warne's long-time personal assistant and now the CEO of the Shane Warne Legacy, said she hoped the leg spin great's death could be lead to change. 'Shane was loved by Australians from all walks of life and we knew we had a platform to do something meaningful,' Ms Nolan said. 'These results are bittersweet. We're proud to have helped thousands take their heart health seriously but we know there's still work to do. Shane would have wanted this to make a massive difference.'

How king of spin Shane Warne is saving thousands of Aussies in his ultimate legacy
How king of spin Shane Warne is saving thousands of Aussies in his ultimate legacy

News.com.au

time11 hours ago

  • Health
  • News.com.au

How king of spin Shane Warne is saving thousands of Aussies in his ultimate legacy

Shane Warne will be remembered as one of Australia's all-time sporting greats – but his greatest legacy may be saving thousands of lives. The spin king died suddenly of a heart attack while holidaying in Thailand in March 2022. His death shocked the nation and untold millions of cricket lovers across the globe. But it also spurred the launch of the Shane Warne Legacy, which over the summer rolled out a national heart health screening initiative. The foundation hopes that Warne's untimely death can be a catalyst for change and help Australians identify the warning signs. As part of the initiative, over 76,000 Australians were screened at pharmacies across the country and the Boxing Day Test. The results of the Monash University-led study, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, have revealed that seven out of 10 Australians screened had at least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. 'They identified thousands of Australians at risk, many of whom hadn't had a blood pressure check in the past year,' Dr Sean Tan said. 'Meeting people where they are, whether that's at their local pharmacy or the MCG, can make all the difference to health outcomes.' The checks found that just shy of 69 per cent of people had a risk factor for heart disease such as elevated blood pressure, being overweight or obese, or smoking. It also found half of the people with high blood pressure hadn't had a check in the last year. Helen Nolan, Warne's long-time personal assistant and now the CEO of the Shane Warne Legacy, said she hoped the leg spin great's death could be lead to change. 'Shane was loved by Australians from all walks of life and we knew we had a platform to do something meaningful,' Ms Nolan said. 'These results are bittersweet. We're proud to have helped thousands take their heart health seriously but we know there's still work to do. Shane would have wanted this to make a massive difference.'

How Warnie is saving thousands
How Warnie is saving thousands

Perth Now

time13 hours ago

  • Health
  • Perth Now

How Warnie is saving thousands

Shane Warne will be remembered as one of Australia's all-time sporting greats – but his greatest legacy may be saving thousands of lives. The spin king died suddenly of a heart attack while holidaying in Thailand in March 2022. His death shocked the nation and untold millions of cricket lovers across the globe. But it also spurred the launch of the Shane Warne Legacy, which over the summer rolled out a national heart health screening initiative. The foundation hopes that Warne's untimely death can be a catalyst for change and help Australians identify the warning signs. As part of the initiative, over 76,000 Australians were screened at pharmacies across the country and the Boxing Day Test. The results of the Monash University-led study, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, have revealed that seven out of 10 Australians screened had at least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. 'They identified thousands of Australians at risk, many of whom hadn't had a blood pressure check in the past year,' Dr Sean Tan said. 'Meeting people where they are, whether that's at their local pharmacy or the MCG, can make all the difference to health outcomes.' The checks found that just shy of 69 per cent of people had a risk factor for heart disease such as elevated blood pressure, being overweight or obese, or smoking. Shane Warne's daughters Brooke and Summer Warne with one of the check up machines at the MCG. NewsWire / Andrew Henshaw Credit: News Corp Australia It also found half of the people with high blood pressure hadn't had a check in the last year. Helen Nolan, Warne's long-time personal assistant and now the CEO of the Shane Warne Legacy, said she hoped the leg spin great's death could be lead to change. 'Shane was loved by Australians from all walks of life and we knew we had a platform to do something meaningful,' Ms Nolan said. 'These results are bittersweet. We're proud to have helped thousands take their heart health seriously but we know there's still work to do. Shane would have wanted this to make a massive difference.'

How spin king Shane Warne is saving thousands of Aussies
How spin king Shane Warne is saving thousands of Aussies

News.com.au

time13 hours ago

  • Health
  • News.com.au

How spin king Shane Warne is saving thousands of Aussies

Shane Warne will be remembered as one of Australia's all-time sporting greats – but his greatest legacy may be saving thousands of lives. The spin king died suddenly of a heart attack while holidaying in Thailand in March 2022. His death shocked the nation and untold millions of cricket lovers across the globe. But it also spurred the launch of the Shane Warne Legacy, which over the summer rolled out a national heart health screening initiative. The foundation hopes that Warne's untimely death can be a catalyst for change and help Australians identify the warning signs. As part of the initiative, over 76,000 Australians were screened at pharmacies across the country and the Boxing Day Test. The results of the Monash University-led study, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, have revealed that seven out of 10 Australians screened had at least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. 'They identified thousands of Australians at risk, many of whom hadn't had a blood pressure check in the past year,' Dr Sean Tan said. 'Meeting people where they are, whether that's at their local pharmacy or the MCG, can make all the difference to health outcomes.' The checks found that just shy of 69 per cent of people had a risk factor for heart disease such as elevated blood pressure, being overweight or obese, or smoking. It also found half of the people with high blood pressure hadn't had a check in the last year. Helen Nolan, Warne's long-time personal assistant and now the CEO of the Shane Warne Legacy, said she hoped the leg spin great's death could be lead to change. 'Shane was loved by Australians from all walks of life and we knew we had a platform to do something meaningful,' Ms Nolan said. 'These results are bittersweet. We're proud to have helped thousands take their heart health seriously but we know there's still work to do. Shane would have wanted this to make a massive difference.'

Three years after his death, cricketer Shane Warne's legacy lives on with heart health checks

time17 hours ago

  • Health

Three years after his death, cricketer Shane Warne's legacy lives on with heart health checks

BRISBANE, Australia -- Cricketer Shane Warne's legacy lives on more than three years after the death of the great spin bowler from a heart attack at the age of 52. Warne died in March 2022 after suffering cardiac arrest while on holiday on the Thai island of Koh Samui. The cause of his sudden death led his business team and family to unite to honor his life and create Shane Warne Legacy. The charity set up free heart health checkup machines at the Melbourne Cricket Ground during the past two Boxing Day tests. The results of the stadium checks along with 311 community pharmacy stations across Australia were analyzed as part of a Monash University-led study. A total of 76,085 people were screened across seven weeks from mid-December 2023 to the end of January 2024, including 7,740 at the MCG. The research published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology on Friday showed almost seven out of 10 (68.9%) had at least one uncontrolled risk factor for heart disease. Factors were elevated blood pressure readings (37.2%), elevated body mass index (60.5%) and being a smoker (12.1%). Cricket spectators who did the free checks, mostly men aged 35 to 64, had higher rates of elevated blood pressure and body mass index than those screened at pharmacies. Warne revived and elevated the art of leg-spin bowling when he emerged on the international scene in the 1990s and was a central character in one of Australia's most successful eras in the sport. He also was one of cricket's larger-than-life showmen. Warne held the record for the most test wickets with 708 when he retired in 2007 after his 145th match. Only Sri Lanka off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan has passed him, with 800. 'Meeting people where they are, whether that's at their local pharmacy or the MCG, can make all the difference to health outcomes,' said Dr. Sean Tan, a cardiologist and researcher at the Victorian Heart Institute. Warne's long-time personal assistant Helen Nolan said the findings reinforced Shane Warne Legacy's mission to turn his death into a catalyst for change. The charity's chief executive described the results as 'bittersweet.' 'We're proud to have helped thousands take their heart health seriously but we know there's still work to do,' Nolan said. 'Shane would have wanted this to make a massive difference.'

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