Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study

Background The Russian Federation has very high cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality rates compared with countries of similar economic development. This cross-sectional study compares the characteristics of CVD-free participants with and without recent primary care contact to ascertain their CVD r...

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Published in:Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
Main Authors: Petersen, Jakob, Kontsevaya, Anna, McKee, Martin, Richardson, Erica, Cook, Sarah, Malyutina, Sofia, Kudryavtsev, Alexander V, Leon, David A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMJ 2020
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-213549
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/jech-2019-213549
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spelling crjcrbmj:10.1136/jech-2019-213549 2024-09-15T17:54:46+00:00 Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study Petersen, Jakob Kontsevaya, Anna McKee, Martin Richardson, Erica Cook, Sarah Malyutina, Sofia Kudryavtsev, Alexander V Leon, David A 2020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-213549 https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/jech-2019-213549 en eng BMJ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health volume 74, issue 9, page 692-967 ISSN 0143-005X 1470-2738 journal-article 2020 crjcrbmj https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-213549 2024-08-01T04:14:50Z Background The Russian Federation has very high cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality rates compared with countries of similar economic development. This cross-sectional study compares the characteristics of CVD-free participants with and without recent primary care contact to ascertain their CVD risk and health status. Methods A total of 2774 participants aged 40–69 years with no self-reported CVD history were selected from a population-based study conducted in Arkhangelsk and Novosibirsk, Russian Federation, 2015–2018. A range of co-variates related to socio-demographics, health and health behaviours were included. Recent primary care contact was defined as seeing primary care doctor in the past year or having attended a general health check under the 2013 Dispansarisation programme. Results The proportion with no recent primary care contact was 32.3% (95% CI 29.7% to 35.0%) in males, 16.3% (95% CI 14.6% to 18.2%) in females, and 23.1% (95% CI 21.6% to 24.7%) overall. In gender-specific age-adjusted analyses, no recent contact was also associated with low education, smoking, very good to excellent self-rated health, no chest pain, CVD 10-year SCORE risk 5+%, absence of hypertension control, absence of hypertension awareness and absence of care-intensive conditions. Among those with no contact: 37% current smokers, 34% with 5+% 10-year CVD risk, 32% untreated hypertension, 20% non-anginal chest pain, 18% problem drinkers, 14% uncontrolled hypertension and 9% Grade 1–2 angina. The proportion without general health check attendance was 54.6%. Conclusion Primary care and community interventions would be required to proactively reach sections of 40–69 year olds currently not in contact with primary care services to reduce their CVD risk through diagnosis, treatment, lifestyle recommendations and active follow-up. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arkhangelsk The BMJ Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health jech-2019-213549
institution Open Polar
collection The BMJ
op_collection_id crjcrbmj
language English
description Background The Russian Federation has very high cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality rates compared with countries of similar economic development. This cross-sectional study compares the characteristics of CVD-free participants with and without recent primary care contact to ascertain their CVD risk and health status. Methods A total of 2774 participants aged 40–69 years with no self-reported CVD history were selected from a population-based study conducted in Arkhangelsk and Novosibirsk, Russian Federation, 2015–2018. A range of co-variates related to socio-demographics, health and health behaviours were included. Recent primary care contact was defined as seeing primary care doctor in the past year or having attended a general health check under the 2013 Dispansarisation programme. Results The proportion with no recent primary care contact was 32.3% (95% CI 29.7% to 35.0%) in males, 16.3% (95% CI 14.6% to 18.2%) in females, and 23.1% (95% CI 21.6% to 24.7%) overall. In gender-specific age-adjusted analyses, no recent contact was also associated with low education, smoking, very good to excellent self-rated health, no chest pain, CVD 10-year SCORE risk 5+%, absence of hypertension control, absence of hypertension awareness and absence of care-intensive conditions. Among those with no contact: 37% current smokers, 34% with 5+% 10-year CVD risk, 32% untreated hypertension, 20% non-anginal chest pain, 18% problem drinkers, 14% uncontrolled hypertension and 9% Grade 1–2 angina. The proportion without general health check attendance was 54.6%. Conclusion Primary care and community interventions would be required to proactively reach sections of 40–69 year olds currently not in contact with primary care services to reduce their CVD risk through diagnosis, treatment, lifestyle recommendations and active follow-up.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Petersen, Jakob
Kontsevaya, Anna
McKee, Martin
Richardson, Erica
Cook, Sarah
Malyutina, Sofia
Kudryavtsev, Alexander V
Leon, David A
spellingShingle Petersen, Jakob
Kontsevaya, Anna
McKee, Martin
Richardson, Erica
Cook, Sarah
Malyutina, Sofia
Kudryavtsev, Alexander V
Leon, David A
Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
author_facet Petersen, Jakob
Kontsevaya, Anna
McKee, Martin
Richardson, Erica
Cook, Sarah
Malyutina, Sofia
Kudryavtsev, Alexander V
Leon, David A
author_sort Petersen, Jakob
title Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
title_short Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
title_full Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in Russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
title_sort primary care use and cardiovascular disease risk in russian 40–69 year olds: a cross-sectional study
publisher BMJ
publishDate 2020
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-213549
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/jech-2019-213549
genre Arkhangelsk
genre_facet Arkhangelsk
op_source Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
volume 74, issue 9, page 692-967
ISSN 0143-005X 1470-2738
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-213549
container_title Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
container_start_page jech-2019-213549
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