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Attitudes to cardiovascular health promotion among GPs and practice nurses

Attitudes to cardiovascular health promotion among GPs and practice nurses
Attitudes to cardiovascular health promotion among GPs and practice nurses
Background. Cardiovascular health promotion is an important element of national health strategy, but doubts have been raised about current methods, and attitudes among general practice staff are ambivalent.
Objectives. We aimed to assess attitudes to cardiovascular health promotion, opinions about efficacy and perceptions of skills in lifestyle counselling in GPs and nurses from the same practices.
Method. A questionnaire survey of 107 GPs and 58 practice nurses from 19 group practices (100% response rate).
Results. Practice nurses were seen to have the main responsibility for cardiovascular health promotion. Although attitudes to health promotion were generally positive, lack of training in lifestyle counselling was perceived to be a problem. Few responders believed that they were very influential in helping people change their lifestyles. Beliefs about the effectiveness of lifestyle counselling were mixed, with cigarette smoking, physical inactivity and obesity being seen as difficult to change. Beliefs in the effectiveness of lifestyle counselling were associated with positive attitudes towards health promotion and greater confidence in training. No association between personal health behaviour and attitudes towards health promotion were observed.
Conclusions. It is recognized that health promotion involves more than the provision of simple information and advice, but GPs and practice nurses lack confidence in lifestyle counselling skills. The attitudes of health professionals are crucial to the implementation of prevention strategies and require regular review.
general-practice, health, counselling, gps, behaviour, perception, efficacy, practice nurses, health promotion, attitudes, obesity, smoking, attitude, implementation, methods, england, general practice, people, practice nurse, questionnaire, strategies, prevention, review, london, nurses
0263-2136
158-163
Steptoe, Andrew
aadc4799-ddd7-4013-a8c9-c37ec87f23c3
Doherty, Sheelagh
b3d7a55d-5bca-4121-8e01-76a8b6029493
Kendrick, Tony
c697a72c-c698-469d-8ac2-f00df40583e5
Rink, Elizabeth
09028936-7054-40eb-a368-cc0c0843298b
Hilton, Sean
b21c9ef8-8efa-4fdc-96df-132948d2401a
Steptoe, Andrew
aadc4799-ddd7-4013-a8c9-c37ec87f23c3
Doherty, Sheelagh
b3d7a55d-5bca-4121-8e01-76a8b6029493
Kendrick, Tony
c697a72c-c698-469d-8ac2-f00df40583e5
Rink, Elizabeth
09028936-7054-40eb-a368-cc0c0843298b
Hilton, Sean
b21c9ef8-8efa-4fdc-96df-132948d2401a

Steptoe, Andrew, Doherty, Sheelagh, Kendrick, Tony, Rink, Elizabeth and Hilton, Sean (1999) Attitudes to cardiovascular health promotion among GPs and practice nurses. Family Practice, 16 (2), 158-163. (doi:10.1093/fampra/16.2.158).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background. Cardiovascular health promotion is an important element of national health strategy, but doubts have been raised about current methods, and attitudes among general practice staff are ambivalent.
Objectives. We aimed to assess attitudes to cardiovascular health promotion, opinions about efficacy and perceptions of skills in lifestyle counselling in GPs and nurses from the same practices.
Method. A questionnaire survey of 107 GPs and 58 practice nurses from 19 group practices (100% response rate).
Results. Practice nurses were seen to have the main responsibility for cardiovascular health promotion. Although attitudes to health promotion were generally positive, lack of training in lifestyle counselling was perceived to be a problem. Few responders believed that they were very influential in helping people change their lifestyles. Beliefs about the effectiveness of lifestyle counselling were mixed, with cigarette smoking, physical inactivity and obesity being seen as difficult to change. Beliefs in the effectiveness of lifestyle counselling were associated with positive attitudes towards health promotion and greater confidence in training. No association between personal health behaviour and attitudes towards health promotion were observed.
Conclusions. It is recognized that health promotion involves more than the provision of simple information and advice, but GPs and practice nurses lack confidence in lifestyle counselling skills. The attitudes of health professionals are crucial to the implementation of prevention strategies and require regular review.

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More information

Published date: 1999
Keywords: general-practice, health, counselling, gps, behaviour, perception, efficacy, practice nurses, health promotion, attitudes, obesity, smoking, attitude, implementation, methods, england, general practice, people, practice nurse, questionnaire, strategies, prevention, review, london, nurses

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 62149
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/62149
ISSN: 0263-2136
PURE UUID: cd347b9c-bc18-42f6-bdad-863bf41dce9f
ORCID for Tony Kendrick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1618-9381

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Date deposited: 08 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:00

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Steptoe
Author: Sheelagh Doherty
Author: Tony Kendrick ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth Rink
Author: Sean Hilton

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