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Frequency and Prioritization of Patient Health Risks from a Structured Health Risk Assessment

Authors :
Roy T. Sabo
Suzanne Heurtin-Roberts
Marcia G. Ory
Alex H. Krist
Ghalib Bello
Sherri N. Sheinfeld-Gorin
Sallie Beth Johnson
Siobhan M. Phillips
Russell E. Glasgow
Beth A. Glenn
Source :
The Annals of Family Medicine. 12:505-513
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Annals of Family Medicine, 2014.

Abstract

PURPOSE To describe the frequency and patient-reported readiness to change, desire to discuss, and perceived importance of 13 health risk factors in a diverse range of primary care practices. METHODS Patients (n = 1,707) in 9 primary care practices in the My Own Health Report (MOHR) trial reported general, behavioral, and psychosocial risk factors (body mass index [BMI], health status, diet, physical activity, sleep, drug use, stress, anxiety or worry, and depression). We classified responses as “at risk” or “healthy” for each factor, and patients indicated their readiness to change and/or desire to discuss identified risk factors with providers. Patients also selected 1 of the factors they were ready to change as most important. We then calculated frequencies within and across these factors and examined variation by patient characteristics and across practices. RESULTS On average, patients had 5.8 (SD = 2.12; range, 0–13) unhealthy behaviors and mental health risk factors. About 55% of patients had more than 6 risk factors. On average, patients wanted to change 1.2 and discuss 0.7 risks. The most common risks were inadequate fruit/vegetable consumption (84.5%) and overweight/obesity (79.6%). Patients were most ready to change BMI (33.3%) and depression (30.7%), and most wanted to discuss depression (41.9%) and anxiety or worry (35.2%). Overall, patients rated health status as most important. CONCLUSIONS Implementing routine comprehensive health risk assessments in primary care will likely identify a high number of behavioral and psychosocial health risks. By soliciting patient priorities, providers and patients can better manage counseling and behavior change.

Details

ISSN :
15441717 and 15441709
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of Family Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3e78086d90dc1cda55d4b4dcdc36c0f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.1717