PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

EMBARGOED MEDIA RELEASE: Breathlessness increases long-term mortality risk, Malawi study finds

2025-09-11
(Press-News.org) Research led by Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and the Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Programme shows that over half of hospital patients with breathlessness had died within a year of admission (51%), as opposed to just 26% of those without the symptom.

Most of these patients had more than one condition that cause breathlessness, including pneumonia, anaemia, heart failure and TB.

The findings demonstrate the importance of integrated, patient-centred care, researchers say, to tackle the burden of high mortality for people with breathlessness, particularly in low-income countries.

Dr Stephen Spencer, Wellcome Trust Clinical PhD Fellow at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM) and the Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Programme (MLW) is lead author on the paper, he said: “Since 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has energised healthcare communities in Africa to expand oxygen access to hospitals, which is critical for patient care. Sadly, our study shows that breathless patients in Malawi still suffer from mortality rates twice as high as in Europe, despite the younger population in Africa.

“Most of these patients live with more than one condition at the same time, which we found to be a factor linked to higher mortality, such as those with TB or pneumonia. This suggests that treating diseases in isolation is not enough, and healthcare models that have traditionally focused on single presenting conditions may overlook important concurrent diseases. Patient-centred health care interventions that can diagnose and treat multiple illnesses at the same time are urgently needed and should be evaluated to see if they can sustainably reduce mortality.”

Study

Published in Thorax, researchers tracked 751 Malawian hospital patients over 12 months, of whom 334 (44%) had breathlessness as a symptom.

Of these patients, 69% who had heart failure had died within a year, alongside 57% with anaemia, 53% with pneumonia, and 47% with TB. Most patients (63%) had multiple conditions, a factor associated with increased mortality.

Dr Ben Morton, Senior Clinical Lecturer at LSTM and senior author on the paper, said: “This is an important study as it provides robust evidence on the complexity of patients with breathlessness in Southern Africa. Whilst established vertical programmes have been important to improve the management of individual diseases like TB, this study shows that more holistic approaches are required to effectively diagnose and manage patients in this context. We also show that breathlessness is a common reason for hospital presentation with particularly poor outcomes, highlighting the urgency to develop improved programmes of care.”

Dr Felix Limbani, Co-Investigator, and Senior Research Associate at MLW said: “While the findings from the breathlessness study are alarming and associated with poor patient outcomes, they provide the much-needed evidence and opportunity for Malawi and other resource limited settings to build respiratory support for their health systems. Availability of medical oxygen and increased capacity of healthcare professionals to diagnose and treat breathlessness and multimorbidity are essential to improving quality of care and patient outcomes.”

The study involved researchers from the Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Programme and Kamuzu University of Health Sciences in Malawi; Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre in Tanzania and Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in Tanzania;  Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust; Liverpool John Moores University; and the University of Manchester and the University of Edinburgh.

 

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Permeable inspection of pharmaceuticals goes in-line

2025-09-11
Summary     Led by Assistant Professor Kou Li, a research group in Chuo University, Japan, has developed a synergetic strategy among non-destructive terahertz (THz)–infrared (IR) photo-monitoring techniques and ultrabroadband sensitive imager sheets toward demonstrating in-line realtime multi-scale quality inspections of pharmaceutical agent pills, with a recent paper publication in Light: Science & Applications.     While non-destructive in-line monitoring at manufacturing sites is essential for ...

Warming rivers in Alaska threaten Chinook salmon populations and Indigenous food security

2025-09-10
For millennia, Indigenous people living in Alaska and Canada’s Yukon territory have relied on Chinook salmon. The large, fatty fish provide essential nutrients for Arctic living and have influenced traditions and languages across generations. But over the past three decades, many communities have been unable to fish Chinook amid a sharp salmon population decline. The situation could worsen as climate change warms rivers in the Arctic, stunting salmon growth, according to a study published August 6 in Scientific Reports led by the University of Colorado Boulder.   “The ...

New multi-disciplinary approach sheds light on the role of mitochondrial DNA mutations in cancer

2025-09-10
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – September 10, 2025) Mitochondria act as energy factories in cells and have their own, separate DNA. Mutations to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) have been observed in cancer, but it has been unclear how these changes might affect cancer growth. To find answers, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists combined computational tools and DNA sequencing technologies to examine these mtDNA mutations in cancer cells closely. Their new method lets scientists pinpoint when these mutations occur, how they change as cancer develops and whether they affect how cancer ...

Worms reveal just how cramped cells really are

2025-09-10
In a new study published in Science Advances Sept. 10, a team of UC Davis researchers tracked the movement of fluorescent particles inside the cells of microscopic worms, providing unprecedented insights into cellular crowding in a multicellular animal. They found that the cytoplasm inside the worms was significantly more crowded and compartmentalized than in single-celled yeast or mammalian tissue culture cells, which are more commonly used to gauge internal cellular dynamics.  This difference highlights the importance ...

Alzheimer’s disease digital resources lacking for Latinos, Hispanics in Los Angeles years after COVID-19, study finds

2025-09-10
Although Latinos and Hispanics are at elevated risk for Alzheimer’s disease and account for almost half of Los Angeles County’s population, a recent UCLA Health study finds that accessible digital resources for these communities remain in short supply since the COVID-19 pandemic. The study, published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, found only a handful of the 15 websites from the county’s top Alzheimer’s disease organizations had features or tools to improve access for Latino and Hispanic families during and amid the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. Senior ...

Chronic disease deaths decline globally, but progress is slowing

2025-09-10
IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON PRESS RELEASE Peer Reviewed / Observational study / People Under STRICT EMBARGO until: Wednesday 10th September 2025 23:30 (UK Time) / 18:30 (US Eastern Time) Chronic disease deaths decline globally, but progress is slowing **Country-level data available, see notes to editors** Mortality from chronic diseases fell in 80% of countries in the decade leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic (2010-2019) Progress has slowed, with 60% of countries performing worse than in the preceding decade Among high-income ...

The Lancet: Chronic disease deaths decline globally, but progress is slowing

2025-09-10
Death rates from chronic diseases have fallen in four out of five countries around the world in the last decade - but progress has slowed, suggests an analysis led by researchers at Imperial College London and published in The Lancet. In recent decades there have been many global and national political pledges and plans to improve prevention and treatment of chronic diseases (also called non-communicable diseases - NCDs), such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, kidney disease, liver disease, neurological conditions and others. This includes the UN Sustainable Development Goal of reducing premature mortality from NCDs by one-third by 2030. This study is believed to be the first ...

The Lancet: Parent-focused programs insufficient to prevent obesity in toddlers, finds meta-analysis; authors call for a re-think of childhood obesity prevention approaches

2025-09-10
A meta-analysis of 17 trials including over 9,000 toddlers found no evidence that parent-focused early childhood obesity prevention programs have an impact on young children's BMI. Authors say their findings underscore the need to re-think current behavioural approaches to prevent obesity in early childhood and stress the need for broader, coordinated and resourced public health action. Existing approaches to parent-focused behavioural programs delivered up to 12 months of age which aim to combat childhood obesity are ...

Study sheds light on hurdles faced in transforming NHS healthcare with AI

2025-09-10
UCL Press Release Under embargo until Thursday 11 September 2025, 00:01 UK time Peer reviewed, qualitative study Study sheds light on hurdles faced in transforming NHS healthcare with AI Implementing artificial intelligence (AI) into NHS hospitals is far harder than initially anticipated, with complications around governance, contracts, data collection, harmonisation with old IT systems, finding the right AI tools and staff training, finds a major new UK study led by UCL researchers.  Authors of the study, published in The Lancet  eClinicalMedicine, say ...

Astrocytic “brake” that blocks spinal cord repair identified

2025-09-10
Spinal cord injuries caused by external trauma, such as traffic accidents or falls, often lead to the permanent loss of motor and sensory functions. This is because the spinal cord—the central pathway connecting the brain and the rest of the body—harbors a “brake” mechanism that halts repair. For the first time, the molecular mechanism behind this braking system has been revealed. A research team led by Director C. Justin LEE of the Center for Cognition and Sociality at the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), in collaboration with Professor HA ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Family-based intervention programs are insufficient to prevent childhood obesity, major study finds

Emotions expressed in real-time barrage comments relate to purchasing intentions and imitative behavior

Your genes could prune your gut bugs and protect you from disease

EMBARGOED MEDIA RELEASE: Breathlessness increases long-term mortality risk, Malawi study finds

Permeable inspection of pharmaceuticals goes in-line

Warming rivers in Alaska threaten Chinook salmon populations and Indigenous food security

New multi-disciplinary approach sheds light on the role of mitochondrial DNA mutations in cancer

Worms reveal just how cramped cells really are

Alzheimer’s disease digital resources lacking for Latinos, Hispanics in Los Angeles years after COVID-19, study finds

Chronic disease deaths decline globally, but progress is slowing

The Lancet: Chronic disease deaths decline globally, but progress is slowing

The Lancet: Parent-focused programs insufficient to prevent obesity in toddlers, finds meta-analysis; authors call for a re-think of childhood obesity prevention approaches

Study sheds light on hurdles faced in transforming NHS healthcare with AI

Astrocytic “brake” that blocks spinal cord repair identified

As farm jobs decline, food industry work holds steady

Kennesaw State researcher aiming to move AI beyond the cloud

Revolutionizing impedance flow cytometry with adjustable microchannel height

Treating opioid addiction in jails improves treatment engagement, reduces overdose deaths and reincarceration

Can’t sleep? Insomnia associated with accelerated brain aging

Study links teacher turnover to higher rates of student suspensions, disciplinary referrals

How harmful bacteria hijack crops

Crowded conditions muddle frogs’ mating choices

A new way to guide light, undeterred

Researchers uncover how COVID-19 may linger in cancer patients and affect treatment outcomes

Tiny metal figurines from Sardinia's Nuragic civilization in around 1,000 BC reveal extensive ancient Mediterranean metal trading networks

Natural microfibers may degrade differently to synthetic materials under simulated sunlight exposure in freshwater and seawater conditions, with implications for how such pollutants affect aquatic lif

Indian new mums report better postpartum wellbeing when their own mum acts as their primary support - while women whose mother-in-law is the primary caregiver instead report significantly lower overal

Young adult intelligence and education are correlated with socioeconomic status in midlife

Traditional and “existential” wellness vary significantly between US regions

Smartwatches detect early signs of PTSD among those watching coverage of the Oct 7 attacks in Israel

[Press-News.org] EMBARGOED MEDIA RELEASE: Breathlessness increases long-term mortality risk, Malawi study finds