Celentano Aldo, Palmieri Vittorio, Panico Salvatore, Russo Cesare, Arezzi Emma, Pezzullo Salvatore, Minichiello Stefana, Guillaro Bruno, Brancati Ciro, Piccinocchi Gaetano, Di Minno Giovanni
Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Federico II University School of Medicine, Naples, Italy.
Ital Heart J. 2005 Jul;6(7):557-64.
Whether the practice of family doctors of assessing individuals' cardiovascular risk profile improves individuals' knowledge of risk factors in primary prevention has not been established. Accordingly, we evaluated patients' knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and lifestyle in healthy subjects whose family doctors provided individual cardiovascular risk score.
Subjects who visited their family doctor in a time frame of 3 months, who accepted to fill-in a simple questionnaire measuring their knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and of non-pharmacological interventions able to reduce cardiovascular risk were evaluated.
Fifty-one family doctors were involved. The study sample comprised 4239 subjects (mean age 56 +/- 9 years, 62% women) in primary prevention. They were classified by their family doctors, based on the Framingham algorithm, as being at low (< 10%; 45.7% of subjects), medium (10-20%; 38.7% of subjects) or moderate-to-high (> 20%; 15.6% of subjects) cardiovascular risk. The prevalence of obese subjects (40, 48, and 49%, respectively) and of heavy smokers (> or = 20 cigarettes/day; 26, 30, and 34%) increased from the low to the moderate-to-high risk group (both p < 0.05). The proportion of subjects unaware of personal history of arterial hypertension (5, 6, and 9%) and that of subjects who were unaware of history of elevated cholesterol levels (10, 11, and 12%, both p < 0.01) increased with higher cardiovascular risk score. The proportion of subjects self-reporting blood pressure > 135/85 mmHg, but self-reporting being normotensive (30, 50, and 52%), and the proportion of subjects who referred cholesterol levels > 200 mg/dl among those who self-referred not to have elevated cholesterol levels (13, 25, and 31%) increased both with cardiovascular risk category (p < 0.001). The proportion of subjects who were unaware of their personal history of diabetes was similar in the cardiovascular risk groups. The prevalence of low educational level was higher (56, 58, and 62%, p < 0.01) and the level of knowledge of non-pharmacological remedies to cardiovascular risk factors (63, 61, and 59%, p < 0.01) was lower in higher cardiovascular risk score group. Subjects aged < 55 years showed similar lack of knowledge about cardiovascular risk factors and the proportion of heavy smoking was as high as in the group of older participants.
In cardiovascular primary prevention, the projection of higher individuals' risk profile by family doctors was not paralleled by an increase in individual's knowledge of major cardiovascular risk factors and of lifestyle interventions able to reduce the cardiovascular risk.
家庭医生评估个体心血管风险状况的做法是否能提高个体对一级预防中风险因素的认知尚未明确。因此,我们评估了家庭医生为其提供个体心血管风险评分的健康受试者对心血管风险因素和生活方式的认知情况。
对在3个月时间内拜访家庭医生且愿意填写一份简单问卷的受试者进行评估,该问卷用于测量他们对心血管风险因素以及能够降低心血管风险的非药物干预措施的认知。
共有51名家庭医生参与。研究样本包括4239名处于一级预防的受试者(平均年龄56±9岁,62%为女性)。家庭医生根据弗雷明汉算法将他们分为心血管风险低(<10%;45.7%的受试者)、中(10 - 20%;38.7%的受试者)或中至高(>20%;15.6%的受试者)风险组。肥胖受试者(分别为40%、48%和49%)和重度吸烟者(≥20支/天;26%、30%和34%)的患病率从低风险组到中至高风险组呈上升趋势(均p<0.05)。不知道自己有动脉高血压病史的受试者比例(5%、6%和9%)以及不知道有胆固醇水平升高病史的受试者比例(10%、11%和12%,均p<0.01)随着心血管风险评分升高而增加。自我报告血压>135/85 mmHg但自认为血压正常的受试者比例(30%、50%和52%),以及在自认为胆固醇水平未升高的受试者中报告胆固醇水平>200 mg/dl的受试者比例(13%、25%和31%)均随心血管风险类别增加(p<0.001)。心血管风险组中不知道自己有糖尿病个人史的受试者比例相似。心血管风险评分较高组中低教育水平的患病率更高(56%、58%和62%,p<0.01),对心血管风险因素非药物治疗方法的知晓水平更低(63%、61%和59%,p<0.01)。年龄<55岁的受试者对心血管风险因素的认知缺乏情况类似,重度吸烟比例与老年受试者组一样高。
在心血管一级预防中,家庭医生对个体较高风险状况的评估并未伴随着个体对主要心血管风险因素以及能够降低心血管风险的生活方式干预措施认知的增加。