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OBJECTIVE:To assess the effectiveness of three different methods of promoting secondary prevention of coronary heart disease in primary care. DESIGN:Pragmatic, unblinded, cluster randomised controlled trial. SETTING:Warwickshire. SUBJECTS:21 general practices received intervention; outcome measured in 1906 patients aged 55-75 years with established coronary heart disease. INTERVENTIONS:Audit of notes with summary feedback to primary health care team (audit group); assistance with setting up a disease register and systematic recall of patients to general practitioner (GP recall group); assistance with setting up a disease register and systematic recall of patients to a nurse led clinic (nurse recall group). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:At 18 months' follow up: adequate assessment (defined) of 3 risk factors (blood pressure, cholesterol, and smoking status); prescribing of hypotensive agents, lipid lowering drugs, and antiplatelet drugs; blood pressure, serum cholesterol level, and plasma cotinine levels. RESULTS:Adequate assessment of all 3 risk factors was much more common in the nurse and GP recall groups (85%, 76%) than the audit group (52%). The advantage in the nurse recall compared with the audit group was 33% (95% confidence interval 19% to 46%); in the GP recall group compared with the audit group 23% (10% to 36%), and in the nurse recall group compared with the GP recall group 9% (-3% to 22%). However, these differences in assessment were not reflected in clinical outcomes. Mean blood pressure (148/80, 147/81, 148/81 mm Hg), total cholesterol (5.4, 5.5, 5.5 mmol/l), and cotinine levels (% probable smokers 17%, 16%, 19%) varied little between the nurse recall, GP recall, and audit groups respectively, as did prescribing of hypotensive and lipid lowering agents. Prescribing of antiplatelet drugs was higher in the nurse recall group (85%) than the GP recall or audit groups (80%, 74%). After adjustment for baseline levels, the advantage in the nurse recall group compared with the audit group was 10% (3% to 17%), in the nurse recall group compared with the GP recall group 8% (1% to 15%) and in the GP recall group compared with the audit group 2% (-6% to 10%). CONCLUSIONS:Setting up a register and recall system improved patient assessment at 18 months' follow up but was not consistently better than audit alone in improving treatment or risk factor levels. Understanding the reasons for this is the key next step in improving the quality of care of patients with coronary heart disease.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/bmj.322.7298.1338

Type

Journal article

Journal

BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

Publication Date

06/2001

Volume

322

Addresses

Department of Primary Health Care, University of Oxford, Institute of Health Sciences, Oxford OX3 7LF. michael.moher@dphpc.ox.ac.uk

Keywords

Humans, Coronary Disease, Cholesterol, Antihypertensive Agents, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors, Registries, Follow-Up Studies, Smoking, Family Practice, Blood Pressure, Aged, Middle Aged, Nurse Practitioners, Drug Utilization, Primary Health Care, Continuity of Patient Care, Medical Audit, Female, Male, Hypolipidemic Agents