PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - V Taylor AU - J Robson AU - S Evans TI - Risk factors for coronary heart disease: a study in inner London. DP - 1992 Sep 01 TA - British Journal of General Practice PG - 377--380 VI - 42 IP - 362 4099 - http://bjgp.org/content/42/362/377.short 4100 - http://bjgp.org/content/42/362/377.full SO - Br J Gen Pract1992 Sep 01; 42 AB - A survey was carried out among 281 men and women aged between 30 and 64 years randomly selected from five general practices located in the inner London borough of Tower Hamlets, to determine the prevalence of risk factors for coronary heart disease. Smoking and obesity were both more pronounced in Tower Hamlets than in comparable national studies: 51% of men and 44% of women were smokers and 57% of these were smoking 20 or more cigarettes per day. A body mass index of 30 or more was present in 18% of men and 10% of women and a body mass index of 25 or more in 71% of men and 49% of women. Two or more risk factors for coronary heart disease (smoking and/or hypertension and/or raised cholesterol levels) were present in 25% of men and 22% of women. For every person known by their general practitioner to have established cardiovascular disease, there were an additional two people also at risk on the basis of multiple risk factors. In this inner city population the prevalence of cardiovascular risk, for women as well as men, has major resource and organizational implications for primary care. A strategy for change requires action based on graded multiple risks for both men and women.