Bulletin of the World Health Organization ()

Can non-physician health-care workers assess and manage cardiovascular risk in primary care?

  • Dele O Abegunde,
  • Bakuti Shengelia,
  • Anne Luyten,
  • Alexandra Cameron,
  • Francesca Celletti,
  • Sania Nishtar,
  • Vasu Pandurangi,
  • Shanthi Mendis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0042-96862007000600009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 85, no. 6
pp. 432 – 440

Abstract

Read online

OBJECTIVE: To ascertain the reliability of applying the WHO Cardiovascular Risk Management Package by non-physician health-care workers (NPHWs) in typical primary health-care settings. METHODS: Based on an a priori 80% agreement level between the NPHWs and the "expert" physicians (gold standard), 649 paired (matched) applications of the protocol were obtained for analysis using Kappa statistic and multivariate logit regression. FINDINGS: Results indicate over 80% agreement between raters, from moderate to perfect levels of agreement in almost all of the sections in the package. The odds of obtaining a difference between raters and a benchmark are not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: Applying the WHO Cardiovascular Risk Management Package, NPHWs can be retrained to reliably and effectively assess and manage cardiovascular risks in primary health-care settings where there are no attending physicians. The package could be a useful tool for scaling up the management of cardiovascular diseases in primary health care.