The aim of these new Joint British Societies’
guidelines (JBS 2) developed by the British
Cardiac Society, British Hypertension Society,
Diabetes UK, HEART UK, Primary Care
Cardiovascular Society, and The Stroke
Association is to promote a consistent multidisciplinary
approach to the management of
people with established atherosclerotic cardiovascular
disease (CVD) and those at high risk of
developing symptomatic atherosclerotic disease.
We recommend that CVD prevention in
clinical practice should focus equally on
(i) people with established atherosclerotic CVD,
(ii) people with diabetes, and (iii) apparently
healthy individuals at high risk (CVD risk of
> 20% over 10 years) of developing symptomatic
atherosclerotic disease. This is because they are
all people at high risk of CVD. The object of CVD
prevention in these high risk people is the
same—namely, to reduce the risk of a non-fatal
or fatal atherosclerotic cardiovascular event and
to improve both quality and length of life. This
can be achieved through lifestyle and risk factor
interventions and appropriate drug therapies to
lower blood pressure, modify lipids, and reduce
glycaemia. We have set targets (see below) for
lifestyle, blood pressure, lipids, and glucose for
these high risk people. Cardiovascular protective
drug therapies have specific clinical indications.
For all high risk people a number of drugs from
different classes will reduce the risk of recurrent
disease and increase life expectancy: antithrombotic,
blood pressure, lipid, and glucose lowering
therapies.
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