15 September 2005
Excluding deprivation from heart disease risk is jeopardising thousands of lives
NOTE: This has been released by British Medical Journal in their Specialist Journals release,
with the same embargo. The full study is being published in their journal "Heart". Please credit
the journal as source.
[By neglecting deprivation, cardiovascular risk scoring will exacerbate social gradients in
disease. Heart 2005; online first]
Leaving deprivation out of standard risk assessments for heart disease is potentially denying life
saving preventive treatment to those who need it most, reveals research published ahead of print in
Heart.
A person's estimated chances of developing heart disease, and being allocated "primary preventive"
treatment, is currently calculated using the standard risk factors of smoking, blood pressure,
cholesterol, age, sex, and diabetes. These are typically pulled together in the internationally
used Framingham Risk Score.
Deprivation is excluded, despite known links between poverty and poor health, because definitions
of deprivation vary so much, making international standardisation difficult.
The authors, from the Cardiovascular Epidemiology Unit at the University of Dundee, tracked the
progress of 13,000 healthy Scottish men and women over a period of 10 years to March 1997,
recording deaths and episodes of hospital treatment. All the participants were aged between 30 and
74 at the start of the study,
A new deprivation score - the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) - covering 31
indicators from income to access to services, based on areas of residence, was applied
retrospectively to the data.
Using the SIMD, the authors compared "observed risk" of death/illness from heart disease with
"expected risk", estimated using the Framingham score.
Expected risk showed a modest difference between the most and least deprived sectors of the study
population, while observed risk revealed a very steep difference, which was fivefold in women.
As in other recent studies using the Framingham score, observed risk was lower than expected
overall. But the most deprived 20% determined by the SIMD had twice the ratio of observed to
expected risk of that in the least deprived 20%.
In other words, the Framingham score would allocate them only half as much primary preventive
treatment in proportion to their future level of disease.
The authors estimate that being in the most deprived 20% rather than the least deprived 20% is
broadly equivalent to being 10 years older or having diabetes. And they call for guidelines on
primary prevention to be adjusted to take account of deprivation.
Current standards for risk assessment will widen health inequalities between social groups, by
discriminating against the most needy, so potentially jeopardising thousands of lives, they claim.
Click here to view the paper in full:
http://press.psprings.co.uk/heart/october/Tunstall.pdf
Journal web site: http://heart.bmjjournals.com/
Contact:
Professor Hugh Tunstall-Pedoe, Cardiovascular Epidemiology Unit, Ninewells Hospital and Medical
School, University of Dundee, Scotland
Tel: +44 (0)1382 632 282
Email: h.tunstallpedoe@dundee.ac.uk
By Roddy Isles, Head of Press 01382 344910, out of hours: 07968298585, r.isles@dundee.ac.uk |