Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.

BACKGROUND: The NHS Health Check programme aims to improve prevention, early diagnosis and management of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in England. High and equitable uptake is essential for the programme to effectively reduce the CVD burden. OBJECTIVES: Assessing the impact of a local financial incen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Artac, M, Dalton, A, Majeed, A, Car, J, Huckvale, K, Millett, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2013
_version_ 1797105796077584384
author Artac, M
Dalton, A
Majeed, A
Car, J
Huckvale, K
Millett, C
author_facet Artac, M
Dalton, A
Majeed, A
Car, J
Huckvale, K
Millett, C
author_sort Artac, M
collection OXFORD
description BACKGROUND: The NHS Health Check programme aims to improve prevention, early diagnosis and management of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in England. High and equitable uptake is essential for the programme to effectively reduce the CVD burden. OBJECTIVES: Assessing the impact of a local financial incentive scheme on uptake and statin prescribing in the first 2 years of the programme. METHODS: Cross-sectional study using data from electronic medical records of general practices in Hammersmith and Fulham, London on all patients aged 40-74 years. We assessed uptake of complete Health Check, exclusion of patients from the programme (exception reporting) and statin prescriptions in patients confirmed with high CVD risk. RESULTS: The Health Check uptake was 32.7% in Year 1 and 20.0% in Year 2. Older patients had higher uptake of Health Check than younger (65- to 74-year-old patients: Year 1 adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 2.05 (1.67-2.52) and Year 2 AOR 2.79 (2.49-3.12) compared with 40- to 54-year-old patients). The percentage of confirmed high risk patients prescribed a statin was 17.7% before and 52.9% after the programme. There was a marked variation in Health Check uptake, exception reporting and statin prescribing between practices. CONCLUSIONS: Uptake of the Health Check was low in the first year in patients with estimated high risk despite financial incentives to general practices; although this matched the national required rate in second year. Further evaluations for cost and clinical effectiveness of the programme are needed to clarify whether this spending is appropriate, and to assess the impact of financial incentives on programme performance.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:52:30Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:fd027392-1c54-41cb-b2d0-8fe7d33ffccf
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:52:30Z
publishDate 2013
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:fd027392-1c54-41cb-b2d0-8fe7d33ffccf2022-03-27T13:25:34ZUptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:fd027392-1c54-41cb-b2d0-8fe7d33ffccfEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2013Artac, MDalton, AMajeed, ACar, JHuckvale, KMillett, CBACKGROUND: The NHS Health Check programme aims to improve prevention, early diagnosis and management of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in England. High and equitable uptake is essential for the programme to effectively reduce the CVD burden. OBJECTIVES: Assessing the impact of a local financial incentive scheme on uptake and statin prescribing in the first 2 years of the programme. METHODS: Cross-sectional study using data from electronic medical records of general practices in Hammersmith and Fulham, London on all patients aged 40-74 years. We assessed uptake of complete Health Check, exclusion of patients from the programme (exception reporting) and statin prescriptions in patients confirmed with high CVD risk. RESULTS: The Health Check uptake was 32.7% in Year 1 and 20.0% in Year 2. Older patients had higher uptake of Health Check than younger (65- to 74-year-old patients: Year 1 adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 2.05 (1.67-2.52) and Year 2 AOR 2.79 (2.49-3.12) compared with 40- to 54-year-old patients). The percentage of confirmed high risk patients prescribed a statin was 17.7% before and 52.9% after the programme. There was a marked variation in Health Check uptake, exception reporting and statin prescribing between practices. CONCLUSIONS: Uptake of the Health Check was low in the first year in patients with estimated high risk despite financial incentives to general practices; although this matched the national required rate in second year. Further evaluations for cost and clinical effectiveness of the programme are needed to clarify whether this spending is appropriate, and to assess the impact of financial incentives on programme performance.
spellingShingle Artac, M
Dalton, A
Majeed, A
Car, J
Huckvale, K
Millett, C
Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.
title Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.
title_full Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.
title_fullStr Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.
title_full_unstemmed Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.
title_short Uptake of the NHS Health Check programme in an urban setting.
title_sort uptake of the nhs health check programme in an urban setting
work_keys_str_mv AT artacm uptakeofthenhshealthcheckprogrammeinanurbansetting
AT daltona uptakeofthenhshealthcheckprogrammeinanurbansetting
AT majeeda uptakeofthenhshealthcheckprogrammeinanurbansetting
AT carj uptakeofthenhshealthcheckprogrammeinanurbansetting
AT huckvalek uptakeofthenhshealthcheckprogrammeinanurbansetting
AT millettc uptakeofthenhshealthcheckprogrammeinanurbansetting