Healthy Caribbean Coalition - Jamaican appointed to World Heart Federation board

First Published Jamaica Observer 10th July 2010
JAMAICA is, for the first time, being represented on the board of the World Heart Federation (WHF) with the recent appointment of Deborah Chen as vice-president elect.
Chen, who is executive director of the Heart Foundation of Jamaica (HFJ), was appointed to the federation's 20-member board at the World Congress of Cardiology Scientific Session in Beijing, China on June 16.
Based in Geneva, Switzerland, the WHF is a non-governmental organisation
that is committed to helping people achieve a longer and better life through
prevention and control of heart disease and stroke, with a focus on low and
middle-income countries.
"I am honoured to be elected as vice-president of the World Heart Federation
because it is a testament to the work of the Heart Foundation of Jamaica. I look
forward to the foundation's continued growth and contribution to addressing
cardiovascular disease in Jamaica, and the influence we have made globally," she
said of her new appointment.
Chen has worked extensively in the field of cardiovascular disease
throughout her years at the HFJ and has sat on several international committees.
Affiliations with international bodies include her positions as secretary to the
board of the Inter-American Heart Foundation (IAHF), chair of the IAHF Emergency
Cardiac Care Committee, board member on the National Resuscitation Council of
Jamaica, and project director for the Caribbean Tobacco Control Project. She
also served as member of the National Tobacco Control Committee, and the Lions
Club of Kingston, which founded the HFJ in 1971.
She is married to James Chen and has two sons — Nicholas and Zachary. A past
student of the Holy Childhood High School in Kingston, Chen is a registered
nurse who has completed a post registration course in the intensive care of
heart patients. She holds a Master of Public Health degree from the University
of the West Indies (UWI) and is currently pursuing doctoral studies in public
health at the UWI.
Heart disease and stroke (cardiovascular disease) are the leading cause of
death in all parts of the globe. In order to address this, the WHF conducts
awareness campaigns and action, promoting the exchange of information, ideas and
science among those involved in cardiovascular care, advocating for disease
prevention and control by promoting healthy diets, physical activity and tobacco
free living at an individual, community and policymaker level.
The WHF is a membership organisation comprised of 202 members of medical
societies and heart foundations from more than 100 countries. The body is
recognised by the World Health Organisation as its leading non-governmental
partner in the prevention and control of cardiovascular disease.
Governed by a board, whose members are leading cardiologists from around the
world and executives from major heart foundations, the WHF represents the
broadest range of those involved in heart health.