May 12, 2026 05:27 pm (IST)
Apollo Gleneagles Hospitals observes World Heart Day
Kolkata, Sept 29 (IBNS): Apollo Gleneagles Hospitals celebrated World Heart Day 2014 through a unique initiative this year.
The staff and employees of the hospital released 500 heart shaped red balloons into the sky as a mark of letting go of various harmful habits that cause heart diseases among people.
Each balloon had a special message encrypted on it focusing on one detrimental practice or one good activity that each person can avoid or engage in to have a safe and healthy heart.
These messages were pledged by the large number of visitors who visit the hospital on a daily basis including patients.
The hospital also kick started in-house activities for its staff such as “Heart Olympic” where men and women will compete against each other based on their ability to do push-ups and skipping respectively.
This competition will be on for the next one month. The objective of this competition is to highlight the significance of cardiac exercise, encouraging employees to become fitter.
Speaking on the occasion, Rupali Basu, CEO, Apollo Gleneagles Hospitals and Eastern Region, Apollo Hospitals, India said, “Our heart runs twenty four hours a day in order to keep us alive and healthy. Hence it is our duty to ensure that we engage in the right activities and follow the right habits to keep our heart hale and hearty. At Apollo Gleneagles, it has always been our prerogative to drive significant messages to people that will help them lead a medically fit life. With India being one of the hubs of heart diseases in the world, we hope that this initiative of ours will help making a difference to the lives of people in some way or the other.”
Rabin Chakraborty, Chief of Cardiology, Director, Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory, Apollo Gleneagles Hospitals added, “Heart Disease is reaching as an Epidemic worldwide and India will the Capital of heart disease in the world by 2020. Regulation of life style, control of blood sugar, high blood pressure, overweight, complete cessation of smoking, dietary fat and calorie restriction, no junk food and regular physical exercise are key steps keep the world free of this forthcoming health sprite. Prevention and early detection are cornerstones of healthy heart”.
Sushan Mukhopadhyay, Director, Cardio Thoracic & Vascular Surgery, Apollo Gleneagles Hospitals further added, “Cardiovascular diseases or CVDs contribute greatly to the mortality, morbidity and economic burden of illness around the world. The CVD-related risk factors include tobacco smoking, physical inactivity, diabetes, obesity and hypertension, a lack of daily fruit and vegetable consumption, and psychosocial factors among others. As opposed to their acute disease counterparts, most chronic diseases like CVD’s are largely related to lifestyle factors, and can be minimized or prevented through lifestyle changes by engaging in the right habits and exercises”.
Support Our Journalism
We cannot do without you.. your contribution supports unbiased journalism
IBNS is not driven by any ism- not wokeism, not racism, not skewed secularism, not hyper right-wing or left liberal ideals, nor by any hardline religious beliefs or hyper nationalism. We want to serve you good old objective news, as they are. We do not judge or preach. We let people decide for themselves. We only try to present factual and well-sourced news.
Support objective journalism for a small contribution.
Latest Headlines
Just 8,500 steps a day could be the secret to keeping weight off
Mon, May 11 2026
Panic after hantavirus-hit cruise evacuation: French national falls sick mid-air as virus scare grows
Mon, May 11 2026
Passengers leave hantavirus-hit cruise ship in Tenerife, WHO says outbreak ‘not another COVID’
Sun, May 10 2026
Eating eggs could slash Alzheimer’s risk, new study reveals
Sun, May 10 2026
Deadly Hantavirus scare deepens as 2 Britons test positive after cruise ship outbreak
Sat, May 09 2026
Mamata Banerjee’s Swasthya Sathi faces hospital roadblocks after Bengal poll result
Fri, May 08 2026
Hantavirus on cruise ship sparks panic, WHO says ‘not another COVID
Fri, May 08 2026
