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Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander Peoples and the Heart Health Check
Cardiovascular disease is the biggest contributor to preventable morbidity and mortality among Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander Peoples.
Emerging evidence shows:
cardiovascular events such as heart attack and stroke occur 10 to 20 years earlier in Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander Peoples than in non-Indigenous Australians
three out of four Indigenous Australians under 35 years have one or more risk factors for CVD.
In March 2020 a consensus statement was published that makes new recommendations for assessing cardiovascular disease risk in Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander Peoples aged under 35.
Key differences between the Heart Health Check (MBS item 699 or 177) and the health assessment for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (MBS item 715).
CVD risk assessment for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults (Heart Foundation web page)
J Agostino, D Wong, E Paige, V Wade, C Connell, ME Davey, DP Peiris, D Fitzsimmons, CP Burgess, R Mahoney, E Lonsdale, P Fernando, L Malamoo, S Eades, A Brown, G Jennings, RW Lovett and E Banks, ‘Cardiovascular disease risk assessment for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults aged under 35 years: a consensus statement’, Med J Aust, 2020; 212(9):422-427, doi:10.5694/mja2.50529.
Explore the list of pages in the Heart Health Check Toolkit for health professionals.
Supporting general practices to integrate Heart Health Checks into routine patient care, with a range of resources and easy-to-use tools in one place.
A full list of ready-to-use resources available in this Toolkit
Last updated15 March 2024