Family History Fails to Detect the Majority of Children with High Capillary Blood Total Cholesterol
- 1 February 1991
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of School Health
- Vol. 61 (2), 75-80
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1746-1561.1991.tb03241.x
Abstract
To examine the predictive value of family history in detecting children with high blood cholesterol, finger-stick screening was done in 1,118 children ages 9–10 whose parents provided parental and grandparental history of cardiovascular disease events and risk factors. Mean blood total cholesterol was 167.7 mg/dl with no significant gender or ethnic differences. Of 157 children with blood cholesterol 200 mg/dl or greater, only 61 (38.9%) had a family history of early myocardial infarction or hyperlipidemia; however, the prevalence of a positive family history varied from 2.8% in Vietnamese-Americans to 38.5% in Spanish-surnamed students to 52.6% in all other children. Adherence to current policies recommending screening only children with a positive family history will result in failing to detect a majority of children whose blood cholesterol levels exceed desirable levels for adults, particularly those from ethnic families recently arrived in the U.S.Keywords
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