| Literature DB >> 29654037 |
Sarah L Stevens1, Richard J McManus1, Richard John Stevens1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Hypertension trials and epidemiological studies use multiple clinic blood pressure (BP) measurements at each visit. Repeat measurement is also recommended in international guidance; however, little is known about how BP is measured routinely. This is important for individual patient management and because routinely recorded readings form part of research databases. We aimed to determine the current practice of BP measurement during routine general practice appointments.Entities:
Keywords: general diabetes; hypertension; primary care; quality in health care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29654037 PMCID: PMC5898319 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020589
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flow chart.
Characteristics of participants completing the prospective survey with and without diabetes
| Characteristic | Participants with diabetes | Participants without diabetes |
| Mean (SD)/n (%) | Mean (SD)/n (%) | |
| Male | 157 (56.3) | 15 (27.3) |
| Age | 59.0 (12.1) | 60.3 (12.7) |
| Current smoker | 21 (7.5) | 4 (7.3) |
| Hypertensive | 159 (57.0) | 41 (74.6) |
| Antihypertensive medication | 141 (88.7) | 32 (78.0) |
| Previous CVD | 29 (10.4) | 2 (3.6) |
| Chronic kidney disease | 11 (3.9) | 1 (1.8) |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 12 (4.3) | 1 (1.8) |
| Told at high risk of CVD | 26 (9.3) | 4 (7.3) |
| Region | ||
| Northeast | 9 (3.2) | 0 (0.0) |
| Northwest | 111 (39.8) | 14 (25.5) |
| Yorkshire and The Humber | 19 (6.8) | 1 (1.8) |
| East Midlands | 6 (2.2) | 2 (3.6) |
| West Midlands | 13 (4.7) | 3 (5.5) |
| East of England | 22 (7.9) | 6 (10.9) |
| Southwest | 40 (14.3) | 9 (16.4) |
| Southeast | 42 (15.1) | 15 (27.3) |
| London | 13 (4.7) | 2 (3.6) |
| Other | 0 (0.0) | 2 (3.6) |
| Unknown | 4 (1.4) | 1 (1.8) |
CVD, cardiovascular disease.
Figure 2Mean blood pressure (BP) and 95% CI by reading number in 91 participants with diabetes who reported a value for each BP reading in the prospective survey.
Likelihood of having BP measured multiple times or being asked to monitor BP at home, according to patient and practitioner characteristics (stratified by diabetes status)
| Likelihood of multiple BP measurements | Likelihood of being asked to monitor BP at home | |
| In participants with diabetes | ||
| If the participant was hypertensive versus normotensive | 46/103 (44.7%) vs 28/80 (35.0%), difference=9.7% (−4.5% to 23.9%) | 24/159 (15.1%) vs 13/120 (10.8%), difference=4.3% (−3.6% to 12.1%) |
| If the participant had treated hypertension versus untreated hypertension | 40/93 (43.0%) vs 6/10 (60.0%), difference=−17.0% (−49.0% to 15.0%) | 22/141 (15.6%) vs 2/18 (11.1%), difference=4.5% (−11.2% to 20.2%) |
| If BP was measured by a GP versus a nurse | 16/38 (42.1%) vs 56/139 (40.3%), difference=1.8% (−15.9% to 19.5%) | 11/38 (28.9%) vs 15/139 (10.8%), difference=18.2% (2.8% to 33.5%) |
| In participants without diabetes | ||
| If the participant was hypertensive versus normotensive | 2/6 (33.3%) vs 9/28 (32.1%), difference=1.2% (−40.3% to 42.7%) | 14/41 (34.1%) vs 0/14 (0.0%), difference=34.1% (19.6% to 48.7%) |
| If the participant had treated hypertension versus untreated hypertension | 8/23 (34.8%) vs 1/5 (20.0%), difference=14.8% (−25.3% to 54.9%) | 9/32 (28.1%) vs 5/9 (55.6%), difference=−27.4% (−63.4% to 8.6%) |
| If BP was measured by a GP versus a nurse | 9/21 (42.9%) vs 2/11 (18.2%), difference=24.7% (−6.4% to 55.8%) | 7/21 (33.3%) vs 4/11 (36.4%), difference=−3.0% (−37.9% to 31.8%) |
BP, blood pressure; GP, general practitioner.
Figure 3Mean blood pressure (BP) and 95% CIs by reading number in 20 participants without diabetes who reported a value for each BP reading in the prospective survey.