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Get Free AccessIn general practice, it is too time-consuming to invite all patients for cardiovascular risk assessment.To examine how many patients with an indication for treatment with cardiovascular medication can be identified by ad hoc case-finding when all patients with overweight/obesity are invited for risk assessment.A cross-sectional analysis of the baseline measurements of the Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity study, a population-based prospective cohort study in 6673 persons aged 45-65 years. We calculated the proportion of participants with a treatment indication using the risk prediction Systematic COronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE-NL 2011), for lean, overweight and obese participants. Participants with a history of cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus or rheumatoid arthritis or using cardiovascular medication were not eligible for ad hoc case-finding because they were already identified as being at risk and/or had been treated.Of the study population, 30% had already been identified and/or treated with cardiovascular medication and were therefore not eligible for ad hoc case-finding. Of the eligible participants, 47% were lean, 41% overweight and 12% obese. Of the participants with overweight, 12% had a treatment indication and of the participants with obesity, 19% had a treatment indication. Of all participants with a treatment indication 24% were not yet treated. Of all participants with a new treatment indication, 70% had overweight or obesity.Of the participants with a treatment indication, 24% were not yet treated. Inviting patients with overweight/obesity for cardiovascular risk assessment may help to detect 70% of these residual patients with a treatment indication.
Anna W. de Boer, Renée de Mutsert, Martin den Heijer, J. Wouter Jukema, Frits R. Rosendaal, Jeanet W. Blom, Willem JJ Assendelft (2015). Overweight can be used as a tool to guide case-finding for cardiovascular risk assessment. Family Practice, 32(6), pp. 646-651, DOI: 10.1093/fampra/cmv080.
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Type
Article
Year
2015
Authors
7
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Family Practice
DOI
10.1093/fampra/cmv080
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