(Press-News.org) Pop-up screening for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk held at community pharmacies and large-scale sporting events can identify people with uncontrolled cardiovascular risk factors, according to a study published in JACC, the flagship journal of the American College of Cardiology, and simultaneously presented at the 73rd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Cardiac Society of Australia and New Zealand.
ASCVD is the leading cause of death worldwide but is often preventable in many cases. Regular preventative screenings can identify modifiable risk factors like elevated blood pressure (BP), elevated body mass index (BMI) and smoking, but many people aren’t participating in screenings or receiving recommended preventative care. Although preventative health checks have been shown to reduce rates of ASCVD, implementation on a large community scale has been limited.
“Heart health checks in the community can identify risk factors for future heart disease that can be managed by lifestyle changes or early preventive medications and save lives down the road,” said Professor Stephen Nicholls, senior author of the study and director of the Victorian Heart Institute, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia. “We saw in this study that screening in a variety of places in the community not only works to identify risk but showed that different types of risk were more prevalent depending on screening location, screening day and screening time.”
In this study, researchers performed pop-up screenings at community pharmacies and an international cricket game to determine the number of participants who had uncontrolled cardiovascular risk factors. Health stations were placed in 311 community pharmacies across Australia between Dec. 15, 2023 and Jan. 31, 2024. The health stations were available throughout the opening hours of each individual pharmacy, and screening performed before 5 p.m. was considered to take place during the daytime, while screening conducted after 5 p.m. was classified as evening. The health stations were also available for nine hours a day during an international cricket match played daily between Dec. 26-29, 2023. Screenings were performed as part of the Shane Warne Legacy Health Test initiative in memory of Shane Warne, an Australian cricket icon who suffered a premature and sudden death in 2022. The screening initiative was widely promoted to the public in advance.
Over 76,000 people were screened throughout the seven-week study period, with 89.8% screened at community pharmacies and 10.2% screened at the cricket match. Most participants were between 25 and 34 years old and male. Overall, 52,453 (68.9%) of participants met the primary outcome of having at least one uncontrolled risk factor: elevated BP reading, overweight or obese, or active smoker. Over one third (37.2%) of participants with recorded BP readings were in the hypertensive range.
There were higher rates of having at least one uncontrolled risk factor found among those screened at the cricket match vs. pharmacies. Most participants were between the ages of 35 and 64 years old and male. By individual risk factor, those at the cricket match had higher rates of elevated BP and BMI, but lower rates of smoking compared to those at pharmacies. About half of those with elevated BP readings had not had a BP check in the past year and over 80% were not on any antihypertensive medication.
At pharmacies, 24.3% were screened at rural pharmacies, where majority were over 45 years old and had higher self-reported rates of diabetes. Most screenings took place on weekdays in the evening. Compared to urban community pharmacies, those screened in rural pharmacies had higher rates of all risk factors and self-reported diabetes. About half of those with elevated BP readings had not had a BP check in the past year and almost 70% were not on any antihypertensive medications.
“Pop-up screening can be creatively nested into community-based programs and
events that are frequented by specific at-risk populations,” Nicholls said. “These could direct screening efforts towards populations that could stand to benefit the most from ASCVD risk reduction while concurrently addressing disparities in access to healthcare.”
The American College of Cardiology (ACC) is a global leader dedicated to transforming cardiovascular care and improving heart health for all. For more than 75 years, the ACC has empowered a community of over 60,000 cardiovascular professionals across more than 140 countries with cutting-edge education and advocacy, rigorous professional credentials, and trusted clinical guidance. From its world-class JACC Journals and NCDR registries to its Accreditation Services, global network of Chapters and Sections, and CardioSmart patient initiatives, the College is committed to creating a world where science, knowledge and innovation optimize patient care and outcomes. Learn more at www.ACC.org or connect on social media at @ACCinTouch.
The ACC’s JACC Journals rank among the top cardiovascular journals in the world for scientific impact. The flagship journal, the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC) — and specialty journals consisting of JACC: Advances, JACC: Asia, JACC: Basic to Translational Science, JACC: CardioOncology, JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions, JACC: Case Reports, JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology and JACC: Heart Failure — pride themselves on publishing the top peer-reviewed research on all aspects of cardiovascular disease. Learn more at JACC.org.
###
END
What’s Happening
From 16th August to 19th September 2025, the Norwegian research vessel R/V Kronprins Haakon will be sailing into the Arctic Ocean for an expedition organised and funded through the prestigious European Research Council Synergy Grant “i2B – Into The Blue”. The i2B Arctic Ocean Expedition team consisting of 25 scientists will collect new geological archives that will shed light on Arctic climate during past ‘warmer-than-present-day’ conditions (interglacial periods). These archives are crucial to understand the ...
A Medical University of South Carolina team reports in Frontiers in Immunology that it has engineered a new type of genetically modified immune cell that can precisely target and neutralize antibody-producing cells complicit in organ rejection. Similar strategies have been used to stimulate the immune system against certain cancers, but Ferreira’s team is the first to show its utility in tamping down immune responses that can lead to organ rejection.
More than 50,000 organ transplants take place each year in the U.S. While often lifesaving, these procedures depend on a precise match between donor and recipient genes to avoid rejection. When the immune system detects foreign ...
As the world’s largest wheat producer, China’s annual wheat output reaches 136 million tons, and the stability of its production is directly related to global food security. However, in recent years, China’s wheat imports have continued to rise, reaching 9.96 million tons in 2022. Meanwhile, environmental problems caused by excessive fertilizer application have become increasingly prominent. How to ensure output while reducing resource consumption and environmental costs has become a core issue for sustainable agricultural development.
Recently, ...
As a staple food for more than half of the global population, the high and stable yield of rice is directly related to food security. As the world’s largest rice producer, China has increased rice yield per unit through intensive fertilization and flood irrigation, but this model has also brought problems such as soil degradation, water pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions. How to ensure food supply while breaking through resource and environmental constraints?
Xusheng Meng and colleagues from Nanjing Agricultural University proposed a green, high-yield, and high-efficiency rice technology system in a review study, providing a solution to this problem. The ...
The North China Plain is an important “granary” in China, with its winter wheat and summer maize planting areas accounting for 73.6% and 30.6% of the national total for wheat and maize respectively. However, its agricultural production has long been trapped in the dilemma of “high input, low efficiency”—fertilizer usage has increased more than 4 times compared with 40 years ago, while grain output has only risen by 1.2 times. Problems such as over-exploitation of water resources and soil degradation have also become increasingly prominent. How to balance ...
A new generation of CRISPR technology developed at UNSW Sydney offers a safer path to treating genetic diseases like Sickle Cell, while also proving beyond doubt that chemical tags on DNA — often thought to be little more than genetic cobwebs — actively silence genes.
For decades, scientists have debated whether methyl groups — small chemical clusters that accumulate on DNA — are simply detritus that accumulates in the genome where genes are turned off, or the actual cause of gene repression.
But now researchers at UNSW, working with colleagues in the US at the St Jude Children’s Research Hospital (Memphis), have shown in a paper published recently ...
The number of people living with Parkinson's disease globally has doubled in the past 25 years.
Yet the treatment and monitoring of the neurological disease seems many decades behind. Clinicians typically gauge the severity of the disease using subjective rating scales, and a shortage of doctors trained to treat Parkinson's means that people can go months — or years — between clinic visits.
This leaves patients in a troubling spot, often unsure how quickly their disease is progressing and whether they are responding appropriately to medications.
Now, ...
Australian researchers have found that households with solar panels could boost their returns by selling surplus power directly to their neighbours, known as peer-to-peer (P2P) energy sharing, helping to stabilise the electricity grid and negotiating a better price than retailers currently offer.
Worldwide, around 25 million households already rely on solar panels, with forecasts predicting 100 million by 2030. In 2024, the world installed an estimated 597 GW of solar power, a 33% increase compared to 2023.
Australia has one of the highest rates of solar panels ...
A striking photograph of two male saiga antelope sparring on the banks of a steppe lake is the winner of the 2025 BMC Ecology and Evolution and BMC Zoology image competition.
The annual competition spotlights the beauty, struggles, and survival strategies of remarkable life on earth, while celebrating the researchers striving to understand the natural world in the fields of ecology, evolutionary biology, palaeontology, and zoology. Along with the overall winning image, the judges selected winners and runners-up in four categories: Collective ...
Cancer Research UK-funded scientists have uncovered dementia-like behaviour in pancreas cells at risk of turning into cancer. The findings provide clues that could help in the treatment and prevention of pancreatic cancer, a difficult-to-treat disease linked to 6,900 deaths in the UK every year.*
The research was published today (15 August) in the journal Developmental Cell**, and was funded by Cancer Research UK, with additional support from Wellcome, the Medical Research Council, and the Biotechnology ...