Did a health dialogue matter? Self-reported cardiovascular disease and diabetes 11 years after health screening

Lisbeth Färnkvist, Niclas Olofsson, Lars Weinehall, Lisbeth Färnkvist, Niclas Olofsson, Lars Weinehall

Abstract

Objective: To study the potential impact of health screening, with or without a motivational health dialogue, on the risk and morbidity of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and diabetes (DM).

Design: Two cross-sectional studies with an interval of 11 years.

Setting: The community of Härnösand, Sweden.

Subjects: In the first study, 402 men born in 1934, 1944, or 1954 underwent health screening for CVD prevention in 1989. In the second study, 415 men (of the same ages) completed a questionnaire in 2000 (11 years later).

Main outcome measures: Odds ratio (OR) for self-reported CVD and DM.

Results: The odds ratio of self-reported CVD and DM was more than doubled among participants in the health screening without a health dialogue (OR 2.5; 95% CI 0.8-7.4) and threefold for those not participating (OR 3.0; 95% CI 1.0-8.8) compared with those who reported participation in health screening that included a structured health dialogue.

Conclusions: Health screening for the prevention of CVD and DM benefits from inclusion of a structured, motivational health dialogue.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Proportions (%) of healthy individuals by health screening groups in 1989 and 2000.

Source: PubMed

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