• Prehosp Disaster Med · Apr 2000

    Self-reported cardiac risk factors in emergency department nurses and paramedics.

    • T W Barrett, V C Norton, M Busam, J Boyd, D J Maron, and C M Slovis.
    • Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
    • Prehosp Disaster Med. 2000 Apr 1;15(2):14-7.

    Study ObjectiveOur objective was to assess the prevalence of cardiac risk factors in a sample of urban paramedics and emergency department (ED) nurses.MethodsWe asked 175 paramedics and ED nurses working at a busy, urban ED to complete a cardiovascular risk assessment. The survey asked subjects to report smoking history, diet, exercise habits, weight, stress levels, medication use, history of hypertension or cardiac disease, family history of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and cholesterol level (if known).Results129 of 175 surveys were returned (74% return rate) by 85 paramedics and 44 nurses. The percentages of paramedics and nurses at high or very high risk for cardiac disease were 48% and 41%, respectively. Forty-one percent of female respondents and 46% of male respondents were at high or very high risk. Cigarette smoking was reported in 19% of the paramedics and 14% of the nurses. The percentages of paramedics and nurses who reported hypertension were 13% and 11%, respectively. High cholesterol was reported in 31% of paramedics and 16% of nurses.ConclusionsForty-eight percent of paramedics and 41% of ED nurses at this center are at high or very high risk for cardiovascular disease, by self-report. Efforts should be made to better educate and intervene in this population of health-care providers in order to reduce their cardiac risk.

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