key: cord-0908415-yc8aw2pg authors: Duffy, Eamon Y.; Cainzos-Achirica, Miguel; Michos, Erin D. title: Primary and Secondary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in the Era of the Coronavirus Pandemic date: 2020-04-20 journal: Circulation DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.120.047194 sha: a04a7280cdf4a10945f800478ea9bafa5e293c43 doc_id: 908415 cord_uid: yc8aw2pg nan Health technology was already becoming central to cardiology, but this novel context will boost further implementation. This is enhanced by expanded coverage of telemedicine for current and new patients by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, including audio-only visits that significantly widen its reach. 5 Preventive cardiology visits are particularly well-suited for telemedicine because they rely heavily on clinical history, review of laboratory and imaging studies, and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, with less of a need for physical examination. Telemedicine and remote monitoring will make it easier to frequently reach patients to optimize risk factor control, titrate medications, assess diets and physical activity levels, and integrate reminders to meet daily goals, among other capabilities. Given their higher risk of complications, secondary prevention cardiovascular patients are at the center of social distancing measures, and their cardiologists need to ensure effective communication channels. An emphasis will have to be placed on adhering to cardiovascular medications, rehabilitation activities, and healthy lifestyles while isolated. Patients should also be advised to maintain adequate supplies of their chronic medications and instructed on how to refill prescriptions, potentially using mail-order pharmacies in the context of lockdowns and quarantines that impede ready access. Patients should invest in a home blood pressure monitor and a scale. They should be trained to self-evaluate and recognize concerning symptoms, monitor their vital signs and weight, report any abnormalities, and adjust medications. Overall, this new scenario will represent an invaluable opportunity to enhance patient empowerment and ownership in cardiovascular prevention, with less reliance on clinician authority. Besides health implications, the economic effect of the COVID-19 pandemic will be enormous and preventive cardiologists will need to adapt to a landscape of potential economic recession, with some patients facing financial hardship. Care of these patients will need to be particularly sensitive to minimize financial toxicity through medication choices and an emphasis on inexpensive lifestyle changes. Coaching patients for stress management should also be integrated into routine preventive cardiology care. From a research standpoint, enhanced incorporation of telemedicine and other technologies will generate very granular monitoring and patient trajectory data. Evaluation of the benefits of increased self-care and close e-health follow-up approaches will be key areas of cardiovascular outcomes research in the coming years. The same will be true for research on patient-and context-level determinants associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes during lockdowns and on opportunities to improve these. Some patients will flourish, and others will decompensate. This pandemic will further enrich our understanding of the many factors that drive cardiovascular health, disease, and outcomes under various circumstances. Despite the challenges that CVD prevention already faces in this unprecedented context, we believe there are good reasons for hope. As with all crises, novel opportunities and innovation arise (Figure) . The overflow of COVID-19 health-related information has likely increased the general public's awareness of the importance of CVD and its risk factors as powerful predictors of outcomes for both communicable and noncommunicable diseases. The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the extraordinary actions that our societies can take when it comes to tackling urgent crises; in the coming years, we will need to use similar determination, resilience, and innovation to tackle the pandemics of obesity and diabetes mellitus, which will also overwhelm health systems and economies if we do not act promptly. Marked advances in telemedicine in the post-COVID-19 era will provide an opportunity to enhance the care of primary and secondary prevention patients, with implications not only for CVD outcomes but also for reducing the burden of complications and deaths in current and future viral outbreaks. 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