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General practitioner perceptions of assessment and reporting of absolute cardiovascular disease risk via pathology services: a qualitative study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-12, 04:26 authored by N Chapman, Rebekah McWhirterRebekah McWhirter, MG Schultz, D Ezzy, MR Nelson, JE Sharman
Abstract Background Guidelines for cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention recommend assessment of absolute CVD risk to guide clinical management. Despite this, use among general practitioners (GPs) remains limited. Objective Pathology services may provide an appropriate setting to assess and report absolute CVD risk in patients attending for cholesterol measurement. This study aimed to explore GPs perceptions of such a service. Methods A focus group and semi-structured interviews were conducted with GPs (n = 18) in Tasmania, Australia, to identify perceptions of assessment and reporting of absolute CVD risk via pathology services. An example pathology report including absolute CVD risk was provided and discussed. Audio-recordings were transcribed and thematically coded by two researchers. Results Almost all GPs identified that absolute CVD risk assessed and reported via pathology services could address deficits in practice. First, by reducing the number of appointments required to collect risk factors. Second, by providing a systematic (rather than opportunistic) approach for assessment of absolute CVD risk. Third, by reducing misclassification of patient CVD risk caused by overreliance on clinical intuition. All GPs reported they would order absolute CVD risk when issuing a cholesterol referral if such a service was offered. GPs recommended improving the service by providing information on methods used to measure risk factors on the pathology report. Conclusions Absolute CVD risk assessed and reported via pathology services may address challenges of screening CVD risk experienced by GPs in practice and encourage dedicated follow-up care for CVD prevention.

History

Journal

Family practice

Volume

38

Pagination

173-180

Location

England

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0263-2136

eISSN

1460-2229

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS