The CRY Test My Heart Tour 2010 stopped in Oxford from
the 30th of October to 1st of November and screened
local young people. The tour marked one of the flagship
campaigns for CRY during its 15th anniversary year.
The screening sessions took place
outside the town’s Tesco (Cowley) store; and were held
in memory of teenager, Sebastian English, who died
suddenly from an undiagnosed heart condition whilst
playing rugby in 2004. He was aged just 15. Tragically,
his father, Howard, had died from to the same fatal
cardiac condition 11 years earlier, also whilst playing
rugby. At the time, no one suspected that the cause
might have been hereditary.
Former England rugby international
and CRY Patron, Simon Halliday - who was coaching
Howard’s English’s team when he died - supported the 3-day
screening event in Oxford.
Oxford holds a special place in Simon's
heart, as it is where he went to university. As a
student, Simon played rugby for Oxford University,
before going on to play for Bath and England - winning
two Grand Slams and playing in the 1991 World Cup Final
against Australia.
This latest event in the nationwide
Test My Heart Tour came just days after it was
announced by Premiership
Rugby that all elite rugby union players in England
above the age of 16 are to be offered cardiac screening,
in partnership with CRY.
Every week in the UK, 12 young people (aged 35 and
under) lose their lives to sudden cardiac death - a
statistic that is believed to be a conservative
estimate. Following the success of the initial Test My
Heart Tour in 2009 – which saw the huge, mobile
screening unit (donated by health and well-being
company, Phillips) visiting 12 destinations – this
year’s Test My Heart Tour aimed to offer free screening
to over 2,500 young people.
Last year, around 2,500 young people were tested in
venues including supermarkets, town centres and
universities. At least 13 people were diagnosed with
heart abnormalities during the 10 week tour.
A staggering 80 per cent of the apparently healthy 14 to
35 year-olds who die from young sudden cardiac death
will have shown no previous sign of heart defects.
It is
widely accepted that testing saves lives, reinforcing
the importance of the CRY Test My Heart Tour and its
unique ability to detect conditions that might otherwise
have gone unnoticed.
Chief Executive and Founder of Cardiac Risk in the
Young, Alison Cox MBE, said: “As a charity, we are
very excited about the prospect of rolling out our
pioneering tour for the second year.
"The Test My Heart
initiative allows us to reach out to new parts of
England, where access to screening may be poor, as well
as helping us to continue raising the profile of CRY and
the importance of screening young people.
“In 2009, in just over two months, our team
identified a number of young people who were simply
unaware that they were walking around with an
undiagnosed and potentially fatal heart defect –
literally, a ticking timebomb. Thankfully, these people
were treated and are now able to lead normal, active
lives. The consequences of their conditions remaining
undetected simply doesn’t bear thinking about and
underlines the very ethos of CRY and our ongoing mission
to reduce deaths from these sudden and tragic
conditions.”
The mobile unit consists of three rooms where Philips’
ECG and ECHO equipment is used to test people. A doctor
and a team of cardiac physicians are present, with each
screening taking no more than 30 minutes.
For more information about CRY's screening programme
see
www.c-r-y.org.uk/ecg.htm
