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Cardiologists' charting varied by risk factor, and was often discordant with patient report

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Cardiologists' charting varied by risk factor, and was often discordant with patient report

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Title: Cardiologists' charting varied by risk factor, and was often discordant with patient report
Author: Grace, Sherry L.; Alter, David; Higginson, Lyall; Suskin, Neville; Stewart, Donna E.; Gravely-Witte, Shannon
Abstract: Objective: To assess the completeness of cardiac risk factor documentation by cardiologists, and agreement with patient report.
Study Design and Setting: A total of 68 Ontario cardiologists and 789 of their ambulatory cardiology patients were randomly selected. Cardiac risk factor data were systematically extracted from medical charts, and a survey was mailed to participants to assess risk factor
concordance.
Results: With regard to completeness of risk factor documentation, 90.4% of charts contained a report of hypertension, 87.2% of diabetes, 80.5% of dyslipidemia, 78.6% of smoking behavior, 73.0% of other comorbidities, 48.7% of family history of heart disease, and 45.9% of body mass index or obesity. Using Cohen's K, there was a concordance of 87.7% between physician charts and patient self-report
of diabetes, 69.5% for obesity, 56.8% for smoking status, 49% for hypertension, and 48.4% for family history.
Conclusion: Two of four major cardiac risk factors (hypertension and diabetes) were recorded in 90% of patient records; however, arguably the most important reversible risk factors for cardiac disease (dyslipidemia and smoking) were only reported 80% of the time. The results suggest that physician chart report may not be the criterion standard for quality assessment in cardiac risk factor reporting.
Sponsorship: Canadian Institutes of Health Research, grant # MOP-74431
Subject: Medical charts
Risk factors
Cardiologist
Concordance
Completeness
Patient self-report
Type: Article
Rights: http://www.jclinepi.com/
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10315/2559
Published: Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam
Citation: Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 61(10), 1073-1079. October 2008
ISSN: 0895-4356
Date: 2008-10

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