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      An integrated approach to preventing cardiovascular disease: community-based approaches, health system initiatives, and public health policy

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          Abstract

          Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is largely the product of interactions among modifiable risk factors that are common in developed nations and increasingly of concern in developing countries. Hypertension is an important precursor to the development of CVD, and although detection and treatment rates have improved in recent years in some jurisdictions, effective strategies and policies supporting a shift in distribution of risk factors at the population level remain paramount. Challenges in managing cardiovascular health more effectively include factors at the patient, provider, and system level. Strategies to reduce hypertension and CVD should be population based, incorporate multilevel, multicomponent, and socioenvironmental approaches, and integrate community resources with public health and clinical care. There is an urgent need to improve monitoring and management of risk factors through community-wide, primary care-linked initiatives, increase the evidence base for community-based prevention strategies, further develop and evaluate promising program components, and develop new approaches to support healthy lifestyle behaviors in diverse age, socioeconomic, and ethnocultural groups. Policy and system changes are critical to reduce risk in populations, including legislation and public education to reduce dietary sodium and trans-fatty acids, food pricing policies, and changes to health care delivery systems to explicitly support prevention and management of CVD.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Risk Manag Healthc Policy
          Risk Management and Healthcare Policy
          Dove Medical Press
          1179-1594
          2010
          06 September 2010
          : 3
          : 39-48
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Family Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada
          [2 ]Primary Care & Community Research, Child & Family Research Institute, Vancouver, BC, Canada
          [3 ]Department of Family Practice, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
          Author notes
          Correspondence: Janusz Kaczorowski, UBC Department of Family Practice, Suite 320, 5950 University Boulevard, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3 Canada, Tel +1-604-827-4396, Fax +1-604-827-4184, Email janusz.kaczorowski@ 123456familymed.ubc.ca
          Article
          rmhp-3-039
          10.2147/RMHP.S7528
          3270919
          22312217
          c4df1036-9dd7-4ca4-b53e-70856b4f1a22
          © 2010 Karwalajtys and Kaczorowski, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

          This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.

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          Categories
          Review

          Social policy & Welfare
          blood pressure determination,public health practice,risk factors,community health services,community health planning

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