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Barnet’s Healthy Heart Project praised for helping 1,600+ residents from high-risk communities

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(From left to right) Salna Abdallah, Healthy Heart Peer Support Worker; Riffat Ahmed, Healthy Heart Peer Support Worker

A Barnet Council-backed project to improve heart health in high-risk communities has received formal recognition for helping over 1,600 residents in a little under two years.

The African Caribbean Culture Society of Barnet presented Barnet’s Healthy Heart Project with a certificate of appreciation for its service to the community. Since May 2022, 1,683 residents from African, Caribbean, or South Asian backgrounds have been helped to better manage their cardiovascular health.

Judi Dumont-Barter, Healthy Heart Peer Co-ordinator at Healthwatch Barnet, which is delivering the project into its second year, said:  

“It's a privilege to work with our peers in Barnet's African, Caribbean and South Asian communities to tackle cardiovascular disease by having effective conversations, carrying out blood pressure checks, and supporting people to make crucial changes like reducing their salt intake.

“Global majority people are more likely to face health inequalities, and we're passionate about empowering our communities to access improved healthWe're also continually learning from the residents who take part in our project, about how we can work together to challenge inequity. The project is going from strength to strength and we're excited to continue this vital work.”

The project takes a unique approach to heart health by addressing the issue of high blood pressure in African, Caribbean and South Asian communities through peer-to-peer support from trusted and reliable staff who understand, and are part of, these communities. The Heathy Heart programme is part of Healthwatch Barnet. Both are delivered by Inclusion Barnet, a Deaf and Disabled People’s Organisation. Most Inclusion Barnet staff have lived experience of disability and use their experience, combined with their commitment to amplifying residents’ voices, to enrich and strengthen their work.

The Healthy Heart programme offers:

  • Community Outreach – raising awareness about cardiovascular disease and risk factors within the communities of focus.
  • Peer Support – facilitating safe spaces for residents to connect, share experiences, and learn from each other.
  • Culturally Competent Resources – providing culturally relevant materials and information on heart health management and onward signposting to local services.

Dr Janet Djomba, Interim Director of Public Health, Barnet Council, said:

“By encouraging and facilitating conversations with residents at high risk of poor heart health, the Healthy Heart Peer Support Project demonstrates the impact we have when we work alongside our communities to understand and tackle health inequalities in Barnet.

“This recognition from the African Caribbean Culture Society highlights the importance of taking a culturally sensitive approach to health and community engagement, and celebrates the life-changing results the programme has had on hundreds of residents. By helping people understand the consequences of high blood pressure and supporting them to make simple healthy changes, the programme is playing a vital role in ensuring residents live longer, healthier lives.”

A family member of a Healthy Heart Programme participant, said:

“Healthy Heart has saved lives. After my uncle got his blood pressure taken he was told to see his doctor as it was 190/100. He saw his doctor and ended up in hospital. It turned out he had a very serious heart problem and got treatment. Without Healthy Heart he may not have found out until it was too late.”

Project Success

Since its launch in May 2022, the Healthy Heart Peer Support programme has:

  • Delivered peer-to-peer intervention sessions with 1,683 residents
  • Targeted five wards (Colindale, West Hendon, Golders Green, Edgware, Burnt Oak)
  • Engaged with 39 community groups and forums
  • Distributed over 1,400 Healthy Heart resource packs to Barnet organisations

Looking to learn more?

Visit the Healthwatch Barnet website at healthwatchbarnet.co.uk/healthy-heart or contact the Healthy Heart team: 020 3475 1316, text (Mon-Thurs 9am-5pm): 07719105534, or email: healthyheart@healthwatchbarnet.co.uk

ENDS

Notes to editors: 

Read the full report on the first year of the Healthy Heart Project here: https://www.inclusionbarnet.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/HH-Year-1-Executive-Report-updated-Oct-23.pdf

Launched in May 2022 by Inclusion Barnet in partnership with Barnet Council Public Health, in its first year the project engaged with 525 residents. Following this success, the project has now been extended into its second year.  Since autumn 2023, management and oversight has sat within Healthwatch Barnet, which is hosted by Inclusion Barnet.

For more information about Barnet Council’s services to help residents check and support their health, visit: https://yourhealthbarnet.org/check-support-your-health

The NHS has recently launched a new national campaign to find the ‘missing millions’ who have undiagnosed high blood pressure. Find a pharmacy that offers free blood pressure checks near you: https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/pharmacies/find-a-pharmacy-that-offers-free-blood-pressure-checks/

Additional UK statistics:

  • Studies in the UK have shown higher prevalence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in South Asian groups compared with white groups or the national average. Black groups in the UK have a lower risk of CVD compared to the majority of the population, but have a higher prevalence of hypertension and diabetes, which are risk factors for CVD and stroke. Black groups have a higher than average incidence and mortality from hypertension and stroke. The Health Of People From Ethnic Minority Groups In England | The King's Fund (kingsfund.org.uk)
  • A study by the British Heart Foundation provides evidence that Black/ Black British African, African Caribbean/ African Caribbean British and South Asian/ South Asian British people in the UK are at higher risk of developing high blood pressure or type 2 diabetes compared with their white counterparts. How your ethnic background affects your risk of heart and circulatory diseases | BHF - BHF