AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiometabolic diseases are a leading global cause of death, and a study across five European countries evaluated the implementation of selective-prevention services in primary care to promote healthier lifestyles among patients aged 40-65 without existing conditions.
  • Acceptance rates for participation varied significantly, showing a range from 19.5% in Sweden to 100% in the Czech Republic, while the feasibility of these services was generally rated positively by participants.
  • The study highlighted considerable differences in how these prevention services were received and the patients' risk profiles, indicating that local contexts should inform future cardiometabolic health programs.

Article Abstract

(1) Background: Cardiometabolic diseases are the most common cause of death worldwide. As part of a collaborative European study, this paper aims to explore the implementation of primary care selective-prevention services in five European countries. We assessed the implementation process of the selective-prevention services, participants' cardiometabolic profile and risk and participants' evaluation of the services, in terms of feasibility and impact in promoting a healthy lifestyle. (2) Methods: Eligible participants were primary care patients, 40-65 years of age, without any diagnosis of cardiometabolic disease. Two hundred patients were invited to participate per country. The extent to which participants adopted and completed the implementation of selective-prevention services was recorded. Patient demographics, lifestyle-related cardiometabolic risk factors and opinions on the implementation's feasibility were also collected. (3) Results: Acceptance rates varied from 19.5% (n = 39/200) in Sweden to 100% (n = 200/200) in the Czech Republic. Risk assessment completion rates ranged from 65.4% (n = 70/107) in Greece to 100% (n = 39/39) in Sweden. On a ten-point scale, the median (25-75% quartile) of participant-reported implementation feasibility ranged from 7.4 (6.9-7.8) in Greece to 9.2 (8.2-9.9) in Sweden. Willingness to change lifestyle exceeded 80% in all countries. (4) Conclusions: A substantial variation in the implementation of selective-prevention receptiveness and patient risk profile was observed among countries. Our findings suggest that the design and implementation of behavior change cardiometabolic programmes in each country should be informed by the local context and provide some background evidence towards this direction, which can be even more relevant during the current pandemic period.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7730804PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17239080DOI Listing

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