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Thomas
A. Pearson, MD, MPH, PhD |
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Laurie
Kopin, RN, MS, ANP |
Guidelines for Cardiovascular
Risk Reduction
Thomas A. Pearson,
MD, MPH, PhD
Laurie Kopin, RN, MS, ANP
The Strong Preventive Cardiology Program
University of Rochester Medical Center
Rochester, New York
An increasingly important component of high-quality healthcare is the
use of clinical practice guidelines to assist the clinician in providing
evidence-based care.
Guidelines constitute the means by which the science base is translated
into practice (See
Figure). Basic science research, epidemiologic studies, clinical
trials, and economic analyses all contribute to reformulation of guidelines
and serve as the way that all the evidence can be filtered and integrated
into practical recommendations. Moreover, guidelines then can serve as
criteria for high-quality healthcare, which in turn can be used to assess
a provider’s practice for the purpose of feedback, and for studies
of barriers that cause gaps between recommended and actual practice. The
identification and correction of these barriers serve as a quality improvement
feedback loop.
Evidence-based medicine requires the consideration and application of
the best available knowledge to the practice of medicine. This is not
synonymous with clinical trials, but with the best research on basic mechanisms
of disease and on epidemiologic studies as well. These data are then classified
as to the strength of the findings, and are based on levels of evidence
(see
Table). Generally, Class I or Class IIa, with levels of evidence
A and B, constitute the evidence required to recommend a clinical guideline.
This collection of guidelines is designed to assist the busy clinician
in the practice of evidence-based cardiovascular risk-reduction and preventive
cardiology. This module includes 17 current guidelines relevant to this
goal. The module begins with the Framingham risk scoring system used by
the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III guidelines.
The next segments deal with more general, multiple-risk factor guidelines
on primary prevention, and in special populations such as women and children.
Individual risk-factor guidelines (eg, blood pressure, tobacco, etc) are
described. Finally, guidelines for improving cardiovascular health at
the community level are provided as a challenge to the clinician to become
involved in his/her community. Note that where possible, the guidelines
have been updated with the latest information available (eg, specifics
from JNC 7). Each guideline is presented in the form of a summary table
or illustration.
It is hoped that this collection of cardiovascular risk factor guidelines
in one website may be useful to the busy clinician who otherwise would
need to search multiple other websites or publications. In this way, access
to these up-to-date recommendations will serve to attain our goal of improving
the practice of preventive cardiology.
Thomas A. Pearson, MD, MPH, PhD
Albert D. Kaiser Professor and Chair
Department of Community
and Preventive Medicine
Senior Associate Dean of Clinical Research
University of Rochester School of Medicine
Rochester, New York
Laurie A. Kopin, RN, MS, ANP
Senior Nurse Manager/Nurse Practitioner
Strong Heart Center–Cardiac Rehabilitation and Preventive Cardiology Program
University of Rochester Medical Center
Rochester, New York
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