| Literature DB >> 26729615 |
Matthew Ritchey1, Keming Yuan1, Cathleen Gillespie1, Guangyu Zhang2, Yechiam Ostchega2.
Abstract
Health systems are well positioned to identify and control hypertension among their patients. However, almost one third of US adults with uncontrolled hypertension are currently receiving medical care and are unaware of being hypertensive. This study describes the development and validation of a tool that health systems can use to compare their reported hypertension prevalence with their expected prevalence. Tool users provide the number of patients aged 18 to 85 years treated annually, stratified by sex, age group, race/ethnicity, and comorbidity status. Each stratum is multiplied by stratum-specific national prevalence estimates and the amounts are summed to calculate the number of expected hypertensive patients. The tool's validity was assessed by applying samples from cohorts with known hypertension prevalence; small differences in expected vs actual prevalence were identified (range, -3.3% to 0.6%). This tool provides clinically useful hypertension prevalence estimates that health systems can use to help inform hypertension management quality improvement efforts. Published 2016. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26729615 PMCID: PMC4935656 DOI: 10.1111/jch.12746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) ISSN: 1524-6175 Impact factor: 3.738