The South African stroke risk in general practice study release_repqysk3hbchjcltdc3bm6elvq

by M Connor, P Rheeder, A Bryer, M Meredith, M Beukes, A Dubb, V Fritz

Published .

2005   Volume 95, Issue 5, p334-9

Abstract

Incidence of stroke is increasing in sub-Saharan Africa and stroke prevention is an essential component of successful stroke management. General practitioners (GPs) are well placed to manage stroke risk factors. To design appropriate strategies for risk factor reduction we need to know the risk factor prevalence in each of the population groups attending GPs. The aim of this study was to establish the prevalence of stroke risk factors in the South African general practice population. We conducted a multicentre, observational study of patients attending general practice in South Africa. Two hundred general practices were randomly selected from lists provided by pharmaceutical representatives. Each GP approached 50 consecutive patients aged 30 years and older. Patients completed an information sheet and the GP documented the patient's risk factors. The resulting sample is relevant if not necessarily representative in a statistical sense. A total of 9 731 questionnaires were returned out of a possible 10,000. The mean age of particpants was 50.7 years. Seventy-six per cent had 1 or more risk factors and 40% had 2 or more risk factors. Hypertension was the commonest risk factor in all population groups (55%) but was highest in black patients (59%). Dyslipidaemia was commonest in whites (37%) and least common in blacks (5%). Diabetes was commonest in Asians (24%) but least common in whites (8%). Risk factors other than smoking increased with age. This study provides unique data on the prevalence of stroke risk factors in a South African general practice population. Risk factors are common in all population groups, but differ in distribution among the groups. There is considerable opportunity to reduce the burden of stroke in South Africa through GP screening for and treatment of risk factors.
In text/plain format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   345.0 kB
file_uj6oltkvzzdlfb2yu3rjhdb2qe
www.ajol.info (web)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Year   2005
Language   en ?
PubMed  15931448
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: ed87270c-9c3f-47af-8114-ea890dfa7592
API URL: JSON