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InTouch Magazine - Summer 2005

Letter from the President

Dear Friend of the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation:

Ford BellThis is my last President’s Letter (more on that later), and I want to take this opportunity to highlight, once again, an issue that should be of tremendous concern to all of us.

Jane Brody is the highly respected health writer for The New York Times, and I always enjoy reading her columns, many of which are reprinted in the StarTribune. Although I like to think that I have a fairly good understanding of what the epidemic of obesity means to the health of our country – and to our rapidly rising health care costs – I was still stunned by the figures that she cited in her column on March 29.

For example, 18.2 million Americans now have diabetes, and of that number 90% suffer from adult-onset or Type 2 diabetes, a form of diabetes which is highly associated with obesity and lack of exercise. More disturbing is the fact that 41 million Americans have blood sugar levels which are above normal, a sign that usually precedes the onset of diabetes.

Ms. Brody quotes a pediatric endocrinologist, Dr. Francine Kaufman, who believes that one important factor in the diabetes epidemic is, as Ms. Brody notes, “the failure of schools to set good examples by providing only healthful fare, a loss of physical activity in schools and the inability of many children to walk or bike safely to school or to play outside later.” These are issues that we, as a society, can and should address.

It is harder to address the issue of genes. Ms. Brody notes that some ethnic groups are far more likely to develop Type 2 diabetes than others. Blacks, Hispanic-Americans, Mexican- Americans and Native Americans are all more likely to develop diabetes than are whites. Without any change in our eating and exercise habits, more than two-fifths of blacks and fully half of Hispanic-Americans will develop diabetes.

Diabetes is a leading cause of heart attack, stroke and peripheral vascular disease in America and it already ranks #1 in direct health care costs, consuming $1 of every $7 spent on health care, according to Ms. Brody.

August 1 of this year will mark my 10th anniversary with the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation, and it seems like a very appropriate time for me to move on. I feel very privileged to have spent the past decade working with the outstanding physicians of the Minneapolis Heart Institute – cardiologists, cardiovascular surgeons, radiologists and anesthesiologists. And that is part of the reason that I wanted to begin this letter by underscoring, once again, the tremendous need for all of us to make a commitment to the health of our country and, most especially, the health of our children.

To this day, I find it telling that a group of cardiovascular physicians made the commitment, 23 years ago, to create an independent heart health organization as a way of giving back to the community in which they live and work. Today, the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation is the largest provider of community heart health information in Minnesota, and one of the very largest in the country. We are the only organization that is working on a statewide basis to promote awareness of heart health, exercise and a healthy diet through programs in elementary schools, community centers, churches and work sites. We are the only health organization dedicated to working on a broad scale with communities of color throughout Minnesota, to provide them with information and choices that will allow them to lead heart-healthy lives.

This is the very significant gift that the physicians of the Minneapolis Heart Institute have given to our community – an organization that is a recognized leader in this country in clinical cardiovascular research, and that is leading the way in exciting new treatments for heart disease of all types. And, an organization that devotes itself, every day, to helping people of all ages and all backgrounds take responsibility for their heart health.

Thank you for your generous support of the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation. It has been a tremendous pleasure for me to get know many of you, and I hope that our paths will cross often in the future. I am absolutely confident that even greater successes are in store for this organization, and I urge you to keep an eye on the work of the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation. It is a great treasure for our community.

I wish you all a happy and healthy summer.

Cordially,

Ford Watson Bell, DVM
President
Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation


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