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Cardiovascular Disease – Risk assessment

Posted Oct 21, 2021

Cardiovascular Disease – Risk assessment

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is an umbrella term given to the range of conditions caused through atheroma formation within the blood vessels. It includes coronary heart disease, renal disease, peripheral vascular disease, and stroke. It is also associated with diabetes and cognitive impairment. Although these diseases manifest themselves in very different ways they have the same set of risk factors: smoking, obesity, lipids, lack of exercise, poor diet and high blood pressure. A combination of risk factors puts people at higher risk of CVD than a single, isolated risk factor.

Reducing premature mortality from CVD is a Government priority, and through early identification of cardiovascular risk factors as part of a risk assessment, mortality and morbidity can be improved.1,2 The NHS Health checks for vascular risk assessment provide a structured approach to achieving this objective.3

This resource, consisting of five assessment questions at intermediate level, tests your understanding of risk assessment for CVD, and the tools available. Complete the resource, including reading the featured articles and undertaking some or all of the activities, to obtain a certificate for one hour of continuing professional development to include in your annual portfolio.

Aims and objectives

On completion of this module you should have an understanding of:

  • Who should be offered a CVD risk assessment
  • What should be included in an assessment
  • The different risk assessment tools available
  • Assessment tools for alcohol and exercise assessment
  • Explaining risk to patients

References

1. Living Well for Longer: a call to action to reduce premature mortality. Department of Health, 2013 https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/181103/Living_well_for_longer.pdf

2. Cardiovascular Disease Outcome Strategy: Improving Outcomes for people with or at risk of cardiovascular disease. Department of Health, 2012 https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/217118/9387-2900853-CVD-Outcomes_web1.pdf

3. NHS Health Check Programme, Best Practice Guidance, 2013 available from http://www.healthcheck.nhs.uk

Practice Nurse featured articles

 

Back to basics: assessing cardiovascular risk Linda Edmunds

 

Cardiovascular disease – what the guidelines say Dr Ed Warren

 

Ten things the practice nurse can do about peripheral arterial disease Dr Ed Warren

 

Chronic kidney disease – un update Dr Mary Lowth

 

Assessing Chest Pain in Primary Care Beverley Bostock-Cox

 

Smoking cessation: Tailoring your approach to the individual smoker Darush Attar-Zadeh

Recommended reading

 

Joint British Societies 2 (JBS2) Guidelines. Heart 2005:91:v1-52 http://heart.bmj.com/content/91/suppl_5/v1.full

 

European Guidelines on Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Clinical Practice. European Heart Journal 2012: 33, 1635-1701 http://www.escardio.org/guidelines-surveys/esc-guidelines/GuidelinesDocuments/guidelines-CVD-prevention.pdf

 

UK National Screening Committee, Updated, The Handbook for Vascular Risk Assessment, Risk Reduction and Risk Management, 2012 http://www.healthcheck.nhs.uk/commissioners_and_healthcare_professionals/national_guidance/cardiovascular_risk_assessment/

Education for Health courses

 

CVD risk e learning diploma

 

Hypertensive diploma

 

Hypertension workshop

 

Putting Prevention first workshop

 

Tackling CVD risk workshop

 

Self Management Support and Health Behaviour Change workshop

 

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