Realising the potential of the family history in risk assessment and primary prevention of coronary heart disease in primary care: ADDFAM study protocol
Realising the potential of the family history in risk assessment and primary prevention of coronary heart disease in primary care: ADDFAM study protocol
Background: coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death in the developed world, and its prevention a core activity in current UK general practice. Currently, family history is not systematically integrated into cardiovascular risk assessment in the UK, Europe or the US. Further, primary health care professionals' lack the confidence to interpret family history information and there is a low level of recording of family history information in General Practice (GP) records. Primary prevention of CHD through lifestyle advice has sometimes yielded modest results although, for example, behavioural interventions targeted at "at risk" patients have produced encouraging findings. A family history approach, targeted at those requesting CHD assessment, could motivate lifestyle change. The project will assess the clinical value of incorporating systematic family history information into CHD risk assessment in primary care, from the perspective of the users of this service, the health care practitioners providing this service, and the National Health Service.
Methods/design: the study will include three distinct phases: (1) cross-sectional survey to ascertain baseline information on current recording of family information; (2) through an exploratory matched-pair cluster randomised study, with nested qualitative semi-structured interview and focus group study, to assess the impact of systematic family history recording on participants' and primary care professionals' experience; (3) develop an economic model of the costs and benefits of incorporating family history into CHD risk assessment.
Discussion: on completion of the project, users and primary care practitioners will be more informed of the value and utility of including family history in CHD risk assessment. Further, this approach will also act as a model of how familial risk information can be integrated within mainstream primary care preventive services for common chronic diseases.
Trial registration: current controlled trials ISRCTN17943542.
coronary disease/genetics, Cross-sectional studies, focus groups, genetic predisposition to disease, humans, interviews as topic, life style, medical history taking, Primary health care, primary prevention, risk assessment/economics, state medicine, United Kingdom
Qureshi, Nadeem
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Armstrong, Sarah
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Saukko, Paula
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Sach, Tracey
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Middlemass, Jo
1c8e2fdc-8299-4655-9994-0ac2e7bb7b79
Evans, Phil H.
ce12903b-0d6f-432d-af7d-ecc421d61b25
Kai, Joe
4149b8ab-84df-46e1-8735-4599809387e9
Farrimond, Hannah
ffa7c186-33a0-4e27-81a2-77abdc0166af
Humphries, Steve E.
00daa3dd-2447-4e61-b130-f8bc97ca1b78
Qureshi, Nadeem
2a0e3445-4e34-415a-9527-4b149727fb69
Armstrong, Sarah
6ffe7027-43b4-412f-9768-5c3bf20a24e3
Saukko, Paula
881c0c1d-8f3a-4f14-8ba9-3c1d2acf43ee
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Middlemass, Jo
1c8e2fdc-8299-4655-9994-0ac2e7bb7b79
Evans, Phil H.
ce12903b-0d6f-432d-af7d-ecc421d61b25
Kai, Joe
4149b8ab-84df-46e1-8735-4599809387e9
Farrimond, Hannah
ffa7c186-33a0-4e27-81a2-77abdc0166af
Humphries, Steve E.
00daa3dd-2447-4e61-b130-f8bc97ca1b78
Qureshi, Nadeem, Armstrong, Sarah, Saukko, Paula, Sach, Tracey, Middlemass, Jo, Evans, Phil H., Kai, Joe, Farrimond, Hannah and Humphries, Steve E.
(2009)
Realising the potential of the family history in risk assessment and primary prevention of coronary heart disease in primary care: ADDFAM study protocol.
BMC Health Services Research, 9, [184].
(doi:10.1186/1472-6963-9-184).
Abstract
Background: coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death in the developed world, and its prevention a core activity in current UK general practice. Currently, family history is not systematically integrated into cardiovascular risk assessment in the UK, Europe or the US. Further, primary health care professionals' lack the confidence to interpret family history information and there is a low level of recording of family history information in General Practice (GP) records. Primary prevention of CHD through lifestyle advice has sometimes yielded modest results although, for example, behavioural interventions targeted at "at risk" patients have produced encouraging findings. A family history approach, targeted at those requesting CHD assessment, could motivate lifestyle change. The project will assess the clinical value of incorporating systematic family history information into CHD risk assessment in primary care, from the perspective of the users of this service, the health care practitioners providing this service, and the National Health Service.
Methods/design: the study will include three distinct phases: (1) cross-sectional survey to ascertain baseline information on current recording of family information; (2) through an exploratory matched-pair cluster randomised study, with nested qualitative semi-structured interview and focus group study, to assess the impact of systematic family history recording on participants' and primary care professionals' experience; (3) develop an economic model of the costs and benefits of incorporating family history into CHD risk assessment.
Discussion: on completion of the project, users and primary care practitioners will be more informed of the value and utility of including family history in CHD risk assessment. Further, this approach will also act as a model of how familial risk information can be integrated within mainstream primary care preventive services for common chronic diseases.
Trial registration: current controlled trials ISRCTN17943542.
Text
1472-6963-9-184
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 12 October 2009
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 October 2009
Keywords:
coronary disease/genetics, Cross-sectional studies, focus groups, genetic predisposition to disease, humans, interviews as topic, life style, medical history taking, Primary health care, primary prevention, risk assessment/economics, state medicine, United Kingdom
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478170
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478170
ISSN: 1472-6963
PURE UUID: 4c7480b8-97c4-4e85-bd7f-d56044935995
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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2023 17:00
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19
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Contributors
Author:
Nadeem Qureshi
Author:
Sarah Armstrong
Author:
Paula Saukko
Author:
Tracey Sach
Author:
Jo Middlemass
Author:
Phil H. Evans
Author:
Joe Kai
Author:
Hannah Farrimond
Author:
Steve E. Humphries
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