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World Heart Federation Cholesterol Roadmap: The Portuguese case.
Abreu, Ana; Dores, Hélder; Gonçalves, Lino; Franco, Fátima; Silveira, Conceição; Proença, Gonçalo; Teresa Timóteo, Ana; Cardim, Nuno; Pedro, Mónica; Fiuza, Manuela; Ferreira, Daniel; Bento, Luísa; Patrício, Lino; Caldeira, Daniel; Bravo Baptista, Sérgio; Santos, José; Rocha, Evangelista; Raimundo, Anabela; Catarino, Carlos; Carrageta, Manuel; Mexia, Ricardo; Araújo, Francisco; Pereira, Hélder; Santos, Raul; Pinto, Fausto J.
  • Abreu A; Serviço Cardiologia, Hospital Santa Maria, Lisboa, Portugal. Electronic address: ananabreu@hotmail.com.
  • Dores H; Hospital da Luz, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Gonçalves L; Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, EPE, Coimbra, Portugal.
  • Franco F; Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, EPE, Coimbra, Portugal.
  • Silveira C; Hospital das Forças Armadas, Polo de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Proença G; Hospital dos Lusíadas, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Teresa Timóteo A; Centro Hospitalar Universitário de Lisboa Central, EPE/Hospital de Santa Marta, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Cardim N; Hospital Cuf Descobertas, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Pedro M; Centro Hospitalar Lisboa, Portugal Norte, EPE/Hospital Santa Maria, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Fiuza M; Centro Hospitalar Lisboa, Portugal Norte, EPE/Hospital Santa Maria, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Ferreira D; Hospital da Luz, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Bento L; Hospital Garcia de Orta, EPE, Almada, Portugal.
  • Patrício L; Hospital Espírito Santo, EPE, Évora, Portugal.
  • Caldeira D; Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Bravo Baptista S; Hospital Prof. Dr. Fernando da Fonseca, EPE/Hospital Amadora Sintra, Amadora, Portugal.
  • Santos J; Hospital da Luz, Setúbal, Portugal.
  • Rocha E; Hospital das Forças Armadas, Polo de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Raimundo A; Hospital da Luz, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Catarino C; Hospital Garcia da Orta, EPE, Almada, Portugal.
  • Carrageta M; Fundação Portuguesa de Cardiologia, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Mexia R; Faculdade Ciências Médicas da Universidade Católica, Lisboa, Portugal.
  • Araújo F; Hospital Beatriz Ângelo, Loures, Portugal.
  • Pereira H; Hospital Garcia da Orta, EPE, Almada, Portugal.
  • Santos R; Universidade de S. Paulo, S. Paulo, Brazil.
  • Pinto FJ; Centro Hospitalar Lisboa, Portugal Norte, EPE/Hospital Santa Maria, Lisboa, Portugal.
Rev Port Cardiol ; 2024 Jul 06.
Article en En, Pt | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38972451
ABSTRACT
Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) remains the major cause of premature death and disability; effective cardiovascular (CV) risk prevention is fundamental. The World Heart Federation (WHF) Cholesterol Roadmap provides a framework for national policy development and aims to achieve ASCVD prevention. At the invitation of the WHF, a group of experts from the Portuguese Society of Cardiology (SPC), addressed the cholesterol burden at nationally and discussed possible strategies to include in a Portuguese cholesterol roadmap. The literature review showed that the cholesterol burden in Portugal is high and especially uncontrolled in those with the highest CV risk. An infographic scorecard was built to include in the WHF collection, for a clear idea about CV risk and cholesterol burden in Portugal, which would also be useful for health policy advocacy. The expert discussion and preventive strategies proposal followed the five pillars of the WHF document awareness improvement; population-based approaches for CV risk and cholesterol; risk assessment/population screening; system-level approaches; surveillance of cholesterol and ASCVD outcomes. These strategies were debated by all the expert participants, with the goal of creating a national cholesterol roadmap to be used for advocacy and as a guide for CV prevention. Several key recommendations were outlined include all stakeholders in a multidisciplinary national program; create a structured activities plan to increase awareness in the population; improve the quality of continuous CV health education; increase the interaction between different health professionals and non-health professionals; increment the referral of patients to cardiac rehabilitation; screen cholesterol levels in the general population, especially high-risk groups; promote patient self-care, engage with patients' associations; use specific social networks to spread information widely; create a national database of cholesterol levels with systematic registry of CV events; redefine strategies based on the evaluation of results; create and involve more patients' associations - invert the pyramid order. In conclusion, ASCVD and the cholesterol burden remain a strong global issue in Portugal, requiring the involvement of multiple stakeholders in prevention. The Portuguese cholesterol roadmap can provide some solutions to help urgently mitigate the problem. Population-based approaches to improve awareness and CV risk assessment and surveillance of cholesterol and ASCVD outcomes are key factors in this change. A call to action is clearly needed to fight hypercholesterolemia and ASCVD burden.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En / Pt Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En / Pt Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article