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Management: Family Practices
Therapy: Statin Therapy

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Total 4 results found since Jan 2013.

How do stroke survivors and their carers use practitioners ’ advice on secondary prevention medications? Qualitative study of an online forum
ConclusionsSide effects of secondary prevention medications and statins in particular, cause anxiety and resentment in some patients, and their concerns are not always addressed by practitioners. Practitioners could consider more proactive strategies to manage such side effects. Forum feedback was appropriate and supportive of the practitioners ’ advice received. Our findings from peer-to-peer online conversations confirm and widen previous research.
Source: Family Practice - April 10, 2017 Category: Primary Care Source Type: research

Statin prescribing for people with severe mental illnesses: a staggered cohort study of 'real-world impacts
Conclusions We found that statin prescribing to people with SMI in UK primary care was effective for lipid modification but not CVD events. The latter finding may reflect insufficient power to detect a smaller effect size than that observed in randomised controlled trials of statins in people without SMI.
Source: BMJ Open - March 6, 2017 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Blackburn, R., Osborn, D., Walters, K., Falcaro, M., Nazareth, I., Petersen, I. Tags: Open access, Cardiovascular medicine, Epidemiology, General practice / Family practice, Mental health Research Source Type: research

Evaluating quality and its determinants in lipid control for secondary prevention of heart disease and stroke in primary care: a study in an inner London Borough
Conclusions In this study, the key factor that explained poor lipid control in people with CVD was having no current prescription record of a statin. Women were more likely to have poorly controlled cholesterol (independent of comorbid risk factors and after adjusting for age, ethnicity, deprivation index and practice-level variation). Women with CVD should be offered statin prescription and may require higher statin dosage for improved control.
Source: BMJ Open - December 9, 2015 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Dodhia, H., Kun, L., Logan Ellis, H., Crompton, J., Wierzbicki, A. S., Williams, H., Hodgkinson, A., Balazs, J. Tags: Open access, Cardiovascular medicine, General practice / Family practice, Health services research Source Type: research

An evidence-based shared decision making programme on the prevention of myocardial infarction in type 2 diabetes: protocol of a randomised-controlled trial
In this study the efficacy of the programme is evaluated in the setting of a diabetes clinic. Methods: A single blinded randomised-controlled trial is conducted to compare the shared decision making programme with a control-intervention. The intervention consists of an evidence-based patient decision aid on the prevention of myocardial infarction and a corresponding counselling module provided by diabetes educators. Similar in duration and structure, the control-intervention targets nutrition, sports, and stress coping. A total of 154 patients between 40 and 69 years of age with type 2 diabetes and no previous diagnosis of...
Source: BMC Family Practice - October 19, 2013 Category: Primary Care Authors: Susanne BuhseTabitha HellerJürgen KasperIngrid MühlhauserUlrich MüllerThomas LehmannMatthias Lenz Source Type: research