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Perdue emphasizes importance of healthy behavior in N.C.

Max Lemanowicz

Issue date: 4/7/09 Section: News
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Media Credit: Travis Bartlett

On Friday, Gov. Beverly Perdue, along with several North Carolina elected officials, joined the kick off at ECU's Heart Institute to announce the new partnership between North Carolina and the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease, or PFCD.

Perdue, members of ECU's Heart Institute and faculty from the Brody School of Medicine took this event as an opportunity to promote the new partnership and to give detailed information about the extreme seriousness of chronic illnesses and how they have been affecting the state.

"We stand strong and highly support Perdue," said Dr. W. Randolph Chitwood, Jr., director of the East Carolina Heart Institute. "She has been working hard to fight for better healthcare in this state with the PFCD and we are highly appreciative of her efforts."

The PFCD was enacted in hopes to save lives and health care dollars. It is a national coalition of providers and community organizations, business and labor groups and health policy experts committed to battling the No. 1 causes of death--disability and rising health care costs in the United States.

Approximately 1.7 million Americans die from chronic diseases a year and these costs add up to more than $1.5 trillion. This is devastating to North Carolina and is continuing to get worse. According to Perdue, seven out of every 10 deaths in the United States are due to chronic diseases and in North Carolina, 50,000 people a year die from them.

Before becoming a politician, working as a lieutenant governor for eight years under Gov. Mike Easley and now governor of the state, Perdue worked as a hospital administrator and consultant.

"I don't like the data about healthcare," said Perdue. "This is what got me into it. We'll get through these times and we need to be hopeful in preventing economic erosion."

According to Perdue, North Carolinians must stop "the killers," including cancer, heart disease, obesity, asthma and other chronic diseases by engaging in healthy eating and wellness behavior. This new partnership with the PFCD has helped put together a strategy to save lives.

Several specific groups are particularly affected by these chronic diseases.

"Recent information has shown that a black baby has seven fewer years to live and also cancer deaths are 35 percent higher for women," said Dr. Paul Cunningham, dean of the Brody School of Medicine.
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