Under-utilisation of preventive medication in patients with cardiovascular disease is greatest in younger age groups (PREDICT-CVD 15)
Suneela Mehta, Sue Wells, Tania Riddell, Andrew Kerr, Romana Pylypchuk, Roger Marshall, Shanthi Ameratunga, Wing Cheuk Chan, Simon Thornley, Sue Crengle, Jeff Harrison, Paul Drury, C Raina Elley, Fionna Bell and Rod Jackson
Journal of Primary Health Care
3(2) 93 - 101
Published: 2011
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Blood pressurelowering (BPL) and lipid-lowering (LL) medications together reduce estimated absolute five-year cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk by >40%. International studies indicate that the proportion of people with CVD receiving pharmacotherapy increases with advancing age. AIM: To compare BPL and LL medications, by sociodemographic characteristics, for patients with known CVD in primary care settings. METHODS: The study population included patients aged 3574 with known CVD assessed in primary care from July 2006 to October 2009 using a web-based computerised decision support system (PREDICT) for risk assessment and management. Clinical data linked anonymously to national sociodemographic and pharmaceutical dispensing databases. Differences in dispensing BPL and LL medications in six months before first PREDICT assessment was analysed according to age, sex, ethnicity and deprivation. RESULTS: Of 7622 people with CVD, 1625 < 55 years old, 2862 were women and 4609 lived in deprived areas (NZDep quintiles 4/5). The study population included 4249 European, 1556 Maori, 1151 Pacific and 329 Indian peoples. BPL medications were dispensed to 81%, LL medications to 73%, both BPL and LL medications to 67%, and 87% received either class of medication. Compared with people aged 6575, people aged 3544 were 3040% less likely and those aged 4554 were 1015% less likely to be dispensed BPL, LL medications or both. There were minimal differences in likelihood of dispensing according to sex, ethnicity or deprivation. DISCUSSION: BPL and LL medications are under-utilised in patients with known CVD in New Zealand. Only two-thirds of patients in this cohort are on both. Younger patients are considerably less likely to be on recommended medications. KEYWORDS: Cardiovascular diseases; drug therapy; secondary prevention; primary health care; demographyhttps://doi.org/10.1071/HC11093
© CSIRO 2011