PI 20 - CVD risk assessment factors
Proportion of regular clients who have had the necessary risk factors assessed to enable cardiovascular disease (CVD) assessment
Description
Proportion of Indigenous regular clients with no known cardiovascular disease (CVD), assessed aged 35 to 74, with information available to calculate their absolute CVD risk.
Notes
- User may select between AIHW's definition of Regular Client (attended the OATSIH-funded primary health care service at least 3 times in 2 years), or Communicare's Current Patient status.
- Patients must be recorded as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander or both.
- Patients must have a sex and date of birth.
- Patients must have the following recorded in the previous 24 months:
- Smoking status (reference qualifier with system code of SMO or SMP).
- Systolic blood pressure (numeric qualifier with system code of BPS).
- Either total cholesterol and HDL (numeric qualifiers with system codes of CHO and HDL) or cholesterol/HDL level (numeric qualifier with system code of CHR).
- For more information about qualifier system codes, see Qualifier codes.
Element | Description |
---|---|
Communicare reports |
|
Numerator | All defined measures must have been recorded in the previous two years. |
Denominator | Regular, Indigenous patients aged 35 years and under 75 years old
at the end of the report period without a CVD diagnosis. For more information about condition codes, see Condition codes reference. |
Additional data recording considerations |
Note: some patients will not have all the measures recorded, but
will still have an absolute CV risk recorded for indicator PI 21. This may be a data entry
issue or may relate to some patients who can have a high risk
inferred due to age and other conditions. For example, over 60
years with diabetes and microalbuminuria.
|
This information relates to V16.1 of the Specifications for National Key Performance Indicators and Online Services Reporting (Solving Health, Specifications for National Key Performance Indicators and Online Services Reporting V16.1. Sydney: Solving Health, March 2024). For more information, see https://www.solvinghealth.au/projects.