Heart Disease Grants in Australia: Funding Cardiovascular Health

Cardiovascular disease — heart attack, heart failure, stroke, and related conditions — remains Australia's leading cause of death, killing approximately 18,000 Australians per year. Despite significant advances in treatment, CVD costs Australia's health system approximately $12 billion annually. Significant inequities exist: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians die from heart disease at more than twice the rate of non-Indigenous Australians. Rural Australians die more often from heart attack because they can't get to hospital in time. Grant funding supports heart research, cardiac rehabilitation, prevention programmes, and the access initiatives that close the CVD gap.

Cardiovascular disease in Australia

Scale

  • CVD is Australia's leading cause of death
  • Approximately 18,000 die from CVD per year
  • Approximately 4.2 million Australians live with cardiovascular disease
  • Heart attack: approximately 57,000 per year (one every nine minutes)

Major conditions

  • Coronary artery disease (leading to heart attack)
  • Heart failure
  • Stroke
  • Peripheral vascular disease
  • Arrhythmias (including atrial fibrillation)
  • Congenital heart disease

Risk factors

  • High blood pressure
  • High cholesterol
  • Diabetes
  • Obesity
  • Smoking
  • Physical inactivity
  • Unhealthy diet
  • Family history

Indigenous Australians and CVD

  • Heart disease mortality more than 2x non-Indigenous Australians
  • Acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease (RHD) — largely eliminated in non-Indigenous, but significant in remote Indigenous communities
  • Earlier onset of CVD
  • Less access to specialist cardiac care

Government cardiovascular funding

NHMRC

Cardiovascular research grants — major funder.

Department of Health

  • National Heart Disease Strategy
  • MBS cardiac items (angiography, bypass surgery, etc.)

Heart Foundation Australia (partially government-supported)

Prevention and research.

AIHW

CVD data and monitoring.

Philanthropic cardiovascular funders

Heart Foundation Australia

Major cardiovascular funder:
- Research grants
- Prevention campaigns
- Community programmes

Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute

Cardiovascular and diabetes research.

Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute

Major cardiac research.

St Vincent's Heart Research Institute

Cardiac research.

Menzies School of Health Research

Indigenous heart health research.

Various hospital cardiac foundations

Most major hospitals have cardiac research foundations.

Types of funded cardiovascular programmes

Research

  • Cardiovascular disease mechanisms
  • Clinical trials for new treatments
  • Genomics and personalised cardiac care
  • Heart failure research
  • Atrial fibrillation research
  • RHD elimination research

Primary prevention

  • Healthy lifestyle programmes (physical activity, diet)
  • Blood pressure screening and management
  • Cholesterol management
  • Smoking cessation
  • Weight management for CVD prevention
  • Salt reduction advocacy

Indigenous heart health

  • Rheumatic fever and RHD prevention (group A streptococcal infection)
  • RHD treatment access in remote communities
  • Indigenous cardiovascular programmes
  • Culturally safe cardiac care

Acute cardiac care

  • Defibrillator access in communities
  • CPR training (public)
  • Chain of survival programmes
  • Rural hospital cardiac care
  • STEMI networks for rapid treatment

Cardiac rehabilitation

  • Post-heart attack rehabilitation programmes
  • Exercise-based cardiac rehab
  • Psychological support post-cardiac event
  • Cardiac rehabilitation access for rural patients

Heart failure management

  • Chronic heart failure disease management
  • Nurse-led heart failure clinics
  • Self-monitoring education
  • Telehealth for heart failure management

Congenital heart disease

  • Paediatric cardiac care
  • Adult congenital heart disease programmes
  • Congenital heart disease surgery access

Women and heart disease

  • Heart disease presents differently in women
  • Under-recognised and under-treated
  • Women's specific cardiac risk factors (pregnancy, menopause)
  • Addressing gender bias in cardiac care

Stroke prevention and recovery

  • Atrial fibrillation detection (stroke prevention)
  • Blood pressure management for stroke prevention
  • Stroke rehabilitation
  • Aphasia and stroke recovery support

Rheumatic heart disease: an inequality of the past

Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) — damage to heart valves from repeated streptococcal throat and skin infections triggering immune attack on the heart — is essentially eliminated in most high-income countries. But in remote Aboriginal communities in Australia:
- Children get streptococcal infections
- Untreated infections lead to acute rheumatic fever (ARF)
- Repeated ARF causes permanent heart valve damage
- Young people require heart surgery or die prematurely

RHD in Aboriginal communities is an avoidable disease requiring systematic treatment (penicillin prophylaxis) and prevention (WASH, streptococcal treatment). Grant funding for RHD elimination is funding the removal of a condition that should not exist in Australia.

Grant application considerations

Indigenous cardiac equity

The Indigenous CVD mortality gap is one of the most significant health inequities in Australia. Applications specifically addressing Indigenous heart health — particularly RHD elimination and culturally safe cardiac care — are high-priority.

Prevention

CVD prevention — blood pressure, cholesterol, smoking — is highly cost-effective but systematically under-funded relative to treatment. Applications for CVD prevention programmes, particularly in high-risk populations, are compelling.

Rural access

Rural Australians die more from heart attack because they can't get to a catheterisation laboratory in time. Applications that improve rural cardiac care — STEMI networks, telemedicine for cardiology, defibrillators in rural areas — address a genuine equity issue.

Cardiac rehabilitation gap

Only about 30% of eligible patients attend cardiac rehabilitation after a heart attack. Applications that increase cardiac rehabilitation access and completion — through telehealth, home-based programmes, or community delivery — improve outcomes.


Tahua's grants management platform supports cardiovascular health funders and cardiac organisations — with programme participant tracking, clinical outcome measurement, rehabilitation completion data, and the reporting tools that help heart health funders demonstrate their investment in reducing Australia's cardiovascular disease burden.

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