Letter from doctor boosts cholesterol medication use
In a new study, Northwestern Medicine researchers found that patients at high risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) are more likely to receive a prescription for cholesterol-lowering medication, and to achieve lower long-term cholesterol levels, when doctors use electronic health records (EHRs) to deliver personalized risk assessments via mail.
"It is important to get high priority preventive care messages to patients in a variety of ways," said Stephen Persell, MD, assistant professor of general internal medicine and geriatrics at Feinberg, and first author on the paper. "Sending a mailed message that depicts one's actual cardiovascular risk may lead some patients to action even though talking about treating cholesterol with their physician did not."
The paper was published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
CVD remains the number one cause of death globally, and is the leading cause of death for both men and women in the United States. High blood pressure, high LDL cholesterol and smoking are well-known key risk factors for heart disease, and about half of Americans (49 percent) have at least one of these three risk factors.
However, according to the study's authors, risk assessment is not performed often in primary care, and doctors may have inaccurate perceptions of patients' risks.
Persell and the Northwestern team believed the use of EHRs to automatically identify candidates for risk-reducing interventions would result in better care delivered directly to patients. They enrolled 29 physicians and 435 eligible patients in the study, and assigned 14 physicians with 218 eligible patients to the test, or intervention, group.
"This is the first study that took a population-wide approach to identifying all patients who might benefit from this kind of an intervention in a primary care setting," said Persell. "Prior studies have only tried this kind of approach with select groups of patients."
Working with the Northwestern Medical Enterprise Data Warehouse, a sophisticated EHR data repository developed jointly by Northwestern University, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, and the Northwestern Memorial Faculty Foundation, researchers identified a pool of at-risk patients who were not being treated with cholesterol-lowering drugs.
Physicians in the test group received automated notification of these high-risk patients, who were then mailed personalized risk assessments. The assessments encouraged them to discuss risk-lowering options with their physicians.
Ultimately, those in the test group were twice as likely as the control group to receive a prescription for lipid-lowering medication, and after extended follow-up 18 months later, 22 percent had lowered their cholesterol significantly (by 30 mg/dl or more) vs. 16.1 percent of controls.
Though these tactics improved results compared to usual care with no follow-up messages, Persell believes there is still room for improvement.
"Many patients who had increased cardiovascular risk and got the risk message sent to them still did not get their cholesterol lowered. Future studies can examine if repeated exposure to these messages leads to bigger changes over time," he said.
Persell said an ongoing study is currently testing whether a similar approach combined with telephone outreach can help patients in federally qualified community health centers control their cardiovascular disease risk.
Approaches like this can also be tested to speed adoption of the new preventive cardiology guidelines from the National Institutes of Health once the guidelines are released.
Feinberg's Donald Lloyd-Jones, MD, senior associate dean for clinical and translational research and chair of preventive medicine, and David Baker, chief of medicine-general internal medicine and geriatrics, were also co-authors on the study.
Journal reference:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
Provided by
Northwestern University
-
Smarter systems help busy doctors remember
Dec 21, 2010 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Simple, common BMI data stored in e-records can identify patients with heart disease risk
Mar 13, 2012 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Physicians beware: Cholesterol counts in kidney disease patients
Sep 23, 2010 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Healthy living adds 14 years to your life
Nov 05, 2012 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Most heart attack patients' cholesterol levels did not indicate cardiac risk
Jan 12, 2009 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Motion perception revisited: High Phi effect challenges established motion perception assumptions
Apr 23, 2013 |
3 / 5 (2) |
2
-
Anything you can do I can do better: Neuromolecular foundations of the superiority illusion (Update)
Apr 02, 2013 |
4.5 / 5 (11) |
5
-
The visual system as economist: Neural resource allocation in visual adaptation
Mar 30, 2013 |
5 / 5 (2) |
9
-
Separate lives: Neuronal and organismal lifespans decoupled
Mar 27, 2013 |
4.9 / 5 (8) |
0
-
Sizing things up: The evolutionary neurobiology of scale invariance
Feb 28, 2013 |
4.8 / 5 (10) |
14
-
Classical and Quantum Mechanics via Lie algebras
Apr 15, 2011
- More from Physics Forums - Independent Research
More news stories
Life expectancy gap widens between those with mental illness and general population
The gap between life expectancy in patients with a mental illness and the general population has widened since 1985 and efforts to reduce this gap should focus on improving physical health, suggest researchers in a paper ...
Health
4 hours ago |
not rated yet |
0
Failure to use linked health records may lead to biased disease estimates
Failure to use linked electronic health records may lead to biased estimates of heart attack incidence and outcome, warn researchers in a paper published in BMJ today.
Health
4 hours ago |
not rated yet |
0
Dietary advice on added sugar is damaging our health, warns heart expert
Dietary advice on added sugar is damaging our health, warns a cardiologist in BMJ today. Dr. Aseem Malhotra believes that "not only has this advice been manipulated by the food industry for profit but it is actually a risk ...
Health
4 hours ago |
5 / 5 (1) |
0
CDC presents recent trends in health behaviors of US adults
(HealthDay)—In 2008 to 2010, the prevalence of key health behaviors among U.S. adults varied, with about one in five adults current smokers and 62.1 percent overweight or obese, according to a report presented ...
Health
6 hours ago |
5 / 5 (1) |
0
Americans still making unhealthy choices, CDC reports
(HealthDay)—The overall health of Americans isn't improving much, with about six in 10 people either overweight or obese and large numbers engaging in unhealthy behaviors like smoking, heavy drinking or ...
Health
7 hours ago |
not rated yet |
0
If you can remember it, you can remember it wrong
(Medical Xpress)—Native peoples in regions where cameras are uncommon sometimes react with caution when their picture is taken. The fear that something must have been stolen from them to create the photo ...
B vitamins could delay dementia
(Medical Xpress)—Despite spending billions of dollars on research and development, drug companies have been unable to come up with effective treatments for dementia and Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Now, A. ...
New sleeping pill poised to hit US markets
An experimental sleeping pill from US drug company Merck is effective at helping people fall and stay asleep, according to reviewers at the US Food and Drug Administration, which could soon approve the new drug.
Reducing caloric intake delays nerve cell loss
Activating an enzyme known to play a role in the anti-aging benefits of calorie restriction delays the loss of brain cells and preserves cognitive function in mice, according to a study published in the May ...
Insight into the dazzling impact of insulin in cells
Australian scientists have charted the path of insulin action in cells in precise detail like never before. This provides a comprehensive blueprint for understanding what goes wrong in diabetes.
Antidepressant reduces stress-induced heart condition
A drug commonly used to treat depression and anxiety may improve a stress-related heart condition in people with stable coronary heart disease, according to researchers at Duke Medicine.