Obesity - Bad News for Breathing!
PRESS RELEASE
WEDNESDAY 16TH AUGUST 2006
Obesity -
Bad News for Breathing!
(and lack of sleep may increase
your weight)!
The Thoracic Society of Australia & New Zealand (TSANZ) appears before the Health Select Committee into Obesity & Diabetes on 16 August 2006 at 10.40 in Hamilton at the Airport Motor Inn.
TSANZ is concerned about the growing obesity problem in NZ. Obesity negatively impacts on sleep and breathing. Their submission details some challenging issues confronting clinicians faced with inadequate health resources and raises some possible solutions.
- Sleep related breathing disorders are an
inevitable consequence of rising levels of obesity.
-
Most people who suffer from sleep related breathing
disorders are undiagnosed.
- Effective treatment is
available and cost effective, but difficult to access.
-
Clinical services are under utilised and under funded to
cope with the growing problem.
The solutions are to be found in:
- Adequate health planning.
- Increased
utilisation of existing sleep disorders services.
-
Increased and improved healthcare resource allocation.
-
Utilising key professional groups to provide direction.
-
Enabling research into the problems and solutions.
Other key messages are:
- Obstructive sleep apnoea
directly contributes to:
- Daytime sleepiness
- Motor
vehicle crashes (2 – 7 fold increased risk)
- Poor
productivity
- High blood pressure
- Coronary artery
disease
- Diabetes
- Respiratory failure
-
Untreated 5 year death rate of 13%
- Māori & Pacific
Islanders as well as New Zealanders living in areas with a
high NZ Deprivation Index are disproportionately
affected.
- Previously a disease of adults, we are now
seeing more children affected –teenagers with morbid
obesity (weight 140 kg!) causing respiratory failure needing
ventilation at home.
- Lack of sleep itself (secondary to
a busy lifestyle, etc.) appears to contribute directly to
obesity and diabetes.
- Sleep services around the country
are limited, under funded and under utilised (because of
capped funding).
- Access to sleep services is not
equitable around NZ.
- Current (2005) DHB spending is
only $
1.59/person/year
ENDS