| Literature DB >> 34948914 |
Audrey A Opoku-Acheampong1, Richard R Rosenkranz1, Koushik Adhikari2, Nancy Muturi3, Cindy Logan4, Tandalayo Kidd1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD, i.e., disease of the heart and blood vessels) is a major cause of death globally. Current assessment tools use either clinical or non-clinical factors alone or in combination to assess CVD risk. The aim of this review was to critically appraise, compare, and summarize existing non-clinically based tools for assessing CVD risk factors in underserved young adult (18-34-year-old) populations. Two online electronic databases-PubMed and Scopus-were searched to identify existing risk assessment tools, using a combination of CVD-related keywords. The search was limited to articles available in English only and published between January 2008 and January 2019. Of the 10,383 studies initially identified, 67 were eligible. In total, 5 out of the 67 articles assessed CVD risk in underserved young adult populations. A total of 21 distinct CVD risk assessment tools were identified; six of these did not require clinical or laboratory data in their estimation (i.e., non-clinical). The main non-clinically based tools identified were the Heart Disease Fact Questionnaire, the Health Beliefs Related to CVD-Perception measure, the Healthy Eating Opinion Survey, the Perception of Risk of Heart Disease Scale, and the WHO STEPwise approach to chronic disease factor surveillance (i.e., the STEPS instrument).Entities:
Keywords: non-clinical; risk assessment; underserved; young adult
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948914 PMCID: PMC8707965 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182413305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Concept table for the literature search.
| Cardiovascular Disease | Risk Assessment | Tool | Young Adult | Vulnerable Populations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MeSH terms/subheadings | Cardiovascular Diseases | Risk Assessment | Surveys and questionnaires, patient-reported outcome measures, healthcare surveys | Young Adult | Vulnerable populations, medically underserved area |
| Text words | cardiovascular AND diseases, “cardiovascular diseases”, cardiovascular AND disease OR “cardiovascular disease” | Risk Assessments, Health Risk Assessment, Health Risk Assessments, Risk Factors, Risk Prediction, Risk Models, Risk Prediction Models | Tools, instrumentation, instruments, community surveys, surveys, questionnaires, “surveys and questionnaires,” measures, outcomes assessment, outcome measures | young adult, young adults | Disadvantaged, Underserved Patients, Underserved Populations, Sensitive Population Groups, Sensitive Populations, Medically Underserved Population, vulnerable, limited [All Fields] AND health resources [mh] |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria of the review.
| Component | Included | Excluded |
|---|---|---|
| Participants |
Specified age range of study participants fell within the target range of the current study (i.e., 18–34 years) or if analyses were subdivided by age groups. Underserved young adults (18–34 years). |
Studies that did not specify any age range for participants but only stated a median or mean age were excluded because it was difficult to ascertain which age groups were being discussed. Studies that recruited only participants from groups with diagnosed conditions linked to the SNAP risk factors (e.g., type 2 diabetes, hypertension) or from specific/special populations (e.g., severe mental illness, eating disorders, elite athletes) as this review was to help select an appropriate tool (i.e., non-clinically based) for assessing CVD risk factors in both symptomatic and asymptomatic young adults. |
| Intervention | Studies designed to increase CVD risk awareness or prevent CVD by altering one or more SNAP risk factors or at least one CVD outcome. | |
| Comparators | Any comparators/controls | |
| Outcome | The main outcome was objective and/or self-reported measure(s) for the non-clinical assessment of modifiable CVD risk factors by evaluating the SNAP risk factors. developed and/or used a questionnaire or instrument to assess at least one CVD outcome developed and validated any tool to assess at least two SNAP risk factors in young adults or underserved young adults reported on CVD risk assessment and/or treatment in people without prior CVD, or in people with and without prior CVD where this information is presented separately reported on all measures developed and/or used in health promotion studies that aimed to increase CVD risk awareness or prevent CVD by altering one or more SNAP risk factors | Articles without full text. |
| Study design | Observational, experimental, and trial studies. | Review/meta-analyses |
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of electronic database search.
Summary of included studies that used non-clinical tools for risk assessment in the general young adult population.
| No. | Author(s); Year of Publication | Study Population | Country | Sample Size | Age (Years) | Gender | Modifiable CVD Risk Factors Assessed (Smoking, Nutrition/Diet, Alcohol Use, or Physical Activity) | Risk Assessment Measure/Tool |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Williamson W et al., 2018 [ | Young adults without clinical evidence of cerebrovascular disease | U.K | 125 | 18–40 | 49% female | Smoking, alcohol use, physical activity | Detailed questionnaire on medical history, socioeconomic status, and self-reported behaviors such as nutritional intake, smoking, and alcohol consumption. |
| 2 | Tran D-T et al., 2016 [ | College students at a Midwestern institution | U.S.A. | 100 | 19–39 | Male & female * | None | Heart Disease Fact Questionnaire; The Health Beliefs Related to Cardiovascular Disease |
| 3 | Thorpe RJ et al., 2016 [ | Participants from 2000–2009 National Health Interview Surveys | U.S.A. | 619,130 | 18–75+ | 52.1% female | Physical activity | Health survey |
| 4 | Lai HL et al., 2015 [ | East Carolina University undergraduates | U.S.A | 525 | 16–23 | 60.7% female | Smoking, physical activity | Health survey (internally validated) |
| 5 | Mark AE et al., 2014 [ | Individuals at risk for coronary heart disease | U.S.A. | 388 | 22–78 | 60.6% female | Nutrition/diet | Questionnaire (the Healthy Eating Opinion Survey) |
| 6 | Bloomfield GS et al., 2013 [ | Adults [Health and Demographic Surveillance System] | Kenya | 4037 | 18–>64 | 61% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, alcohol use, physical activity | Home-based survey using the WHO STEPwise approach to chronic disease risk factor surveillance (WHO STEPS) |
| 7 | Schmitz R et al., 2012 [ | Non-institutionalized adult population (National health interview [GEDA 2009] respondents. | Germany | 21,262 | 18–≥65 | 51.5% female | Nutrition/diet, physical activity | Self-reported physician-diagnosed disease |
| 8 | Koura MR et al., 2012 [ | Young adult females | Saudi Arabia | 370 | Mean = 19.9 ± 1.4 | 100% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, physical activity | WHO-STEPS |
| 9 | Baragou S et al., 2012 [ | The general adult population | Togo | 2000 | 18–98 | 55.1% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, alcohol use, physical activity | WHO STEPS |
| 10 | Foulds HJA et al., 2012 [ | Aboriginal adult population (participants from the Hearts in Training and Health Beat physical activity training programs) | Canada | 882 | 16–77 | 75.2% female | Smoking, physical activity | Multiple-choice questions |
| 11 | Chan CW et al., 2012 [ | Hong Kong Chinese population | Hong Kong | 236 | 18–91 | 66.5% female | None | Survey |
| 12 | Maniadakis N et al., 2011 [ | General adult population | Greece | 3007 | 18–>65 | 51.7% female | None | Survey |
| 13 | Al Hamarneh YN et al., 2011 [ | General adult population | Northern Ireland | 1000 | 20–79 | 46% females | Smoking, nutrition/diet, alcohol use, physical activity | Questionnaire |
| 14 | Kuklina EV et al., 2010 [ | Participants from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) | U.S.A. | 2587 | 20–35 (male); 20–45 (female) | 61.2% female | Smoking | Survey |
| 15 | Wamala JF et al., 2009 [ | Adult population | Uganda | 842 | 20–>75 | 48% female | Smoking, alcohol use, physical activity | Questionnaire |
| 16 | Bjartveit K et al., 2009 [ | Individuals surveyed for CVD risk factors | Norway | 48,682 | 20–49 | 51.6% female | Smoking, physical activity | Questionnaire |
| 17 | Tucker AM et al., 2009 [ | Veteran football players | U.S.A. | 504 | 23–35 | 100% male | Smoking | Survey instrument |
| 18 | Sanderson SC et al., 2009 [ | Respondents from the Office of National Statistics Omnibus Survey | U.K. | 1747 | 16–75 | 47% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, alcohol use, physical activity | Questionnaire |
| 19 | Jamil H et al., 2009 [ | Respondents from the Health Assessment Survey | U.S.A. | 3280 | 18–75 | 71.9% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, physical activity | Health survey |
| 20 | Ammouri AA et al., 2008 [ | General population | Jordan | 295 | 15–75 | 51% female | None | Questionnaire (The Perception of Risk of Heart Disease Scale) |
* Gender distribution not stated in article. (Note: A survey is a method of data collection and analysis, whereas a questionnaire is a tool or instrument used to collect data; a questionnaire may be a subset of a survey).
Figure 2Distribution of included studies by study designs (Note: * Qualitative study).
Summary of included studies that assessed CVD risk in underserved young adult populations.
| No. | Author(s); Year of Publication | Study Population | Country | Sample Size | Age (Years) | Gender | Modifiable CVD Risk Factors Assessed (Smoking, Nutrition/Diet, Alcohol Use, or Physical Activity) | Risk Assessment Measure/Tool |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Doom JR et al., 2017 [ | Add Health study participants | U.S.A. | 14,493 | 24–34 | 48.9% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, alcohol use, physical activity | 30 year Framingham CVD Risk Score |
| 2 | Abshire DA et al., 2016 [ | Undergraduate Caucasian males recruited from a public, 4 year university through purposive and snowball sampling; free of CVD and not enrolled in a health-related major. | U.S.A. | 10 | 18–25 | 100% male | None | Interview guide |
| 3 | Wickrama KAS et al., 2016 [ | Add Health study participants | U.S.A. | 8824 | 24–32 | Male & female * | None | None; biomarkers assessed |
| 4 | Khan RJ et al., 2015 [ | 1997–2004 data from National Health Interview Survey | U.S.A. | 121,284 | 18–44 | 54.5% female | Smoking, physical activity | None |
| 5 | Jamil H et al., 2009 [ | Respondents from the Health Assessment Survey | U.S.A. | 3280 | 18–75 | 71.9% female | Smoking, nutrition/diet, physical activity | Health survey |
* Gender distribution not stated in the article.