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Heart Screenings Could Save Hundreds of Young Lives
25 Feb
Summary
- Routine heart screenings for young people could prevent hundreds of deaths annually.
- An undiagnosed heart condition caused a Cambridge student's death at 20.
- New research suggests ECGs can identify young individuals at risk of sudden cardiac death.

Experts and campaigners are advocating for widespread heart screenings for young people, a measure they believe could prevent hundreds of tragedies each year. This call follows the death of 20-year-old Cambridge University student Clarissa Nichols, who succumbed to an undiagnosed heart condition while hiking in France in 2023.
Research funded by Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY) has demonstrated that electrocardiograms (ECGs) can identify individuals at risk of sudden cardiac death. This is critical as 12 people under 35 die weekly in the UK from hidden heart conditions, often without prior symptoms. The largest study of its kind, analyzing over 104,000 young people aged 14 to 35, found that one in 300 had potentially fatal heart conditions.
Clarissa's mother, Hilary Nichols, has become a prominent advocate for screening, questioning why elite athletes and military recruits receive such checks while the wider population does not. The study has also dispelled the myth that sports exacerbate the dangers of hidden heart conditions, finding no significant difference in sudden cardiac death risk between athletes and non-athletes. This research paves the way for a potential nationwide screening program for young individuals.




