M'sian Cow : Don't follow my example (but then monkey see monkey do)

Ken Masters

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Apr 7, 2010
Messages
75
Points
0

May 29, 2010

Don't follow my example: Khaw
Health Minister admits he was in denial about his heart condition and had put off tests

<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line -->
<!-- end left side bar -->
b11.jpg


Mr Khaw undergoing cardiac physiotherapy at the National Heart Centre. His thrice-weekly sessions at the centre also include treadmill exercises. -- PHOTO: MINISTRY OF HEALTH


<!-- story content : start --> NEARLY four weeks after undergoing a coronary artery bypass graft, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan confessed on his blog that he had been in denial about his condition and put off going for tests and treatment for six weeks, against his doctor's advice. In his blog entry dated May 27, Mr Khaw said cardiologists had told him he needed to have an angiogram as soon as possible due to his high calcium score and abnormal electrocardiogram stress test reading.

A coronary angiogram would allow doctors to inject a dye into the arteries to ascertain blood flow in the heart.
But despite calls from the National Heart Centre to schedule one, Mr Khaw said he put it off and even went to Penang one weekend for Qing Ming. Denial is quite common among patients, said cardiologists, and Mr Khaw's experience is a reminder not to delay health check-ups and follow-up treatments. Most patients experience denial especially when they still feel fit.

In fact, to prove to himself that he was in 'top physical form', the 57-year-old minister went against his doctor's advice to ease up on his exercise routines and did the opposite. 'I used to run on (the) treadmill three times a week; I increased it to five. Each time, I ran at my usual pace of 8km per hour for half an hour,' he said. The stubborn Mr Khaw also stopped carrying his Glytrin spray, a medicine applied under the tongue to dilate blood vessels and make it easier for the heart to pump blood around the body. He told himself: 'I am not going to get a heart attack. I am not going to carry this.'

Read the full story in Saturday's edition of The Straits Times.


 
Back
Top