| Literature DB >> 32456619 |
Eric Kam Pui Lee1,2, Ryan Chun Ming Choi3, Licheng Liu4, Tiffany Gao4, Benjamin Hon Kei Yip4, Samuel Yeung Shan Wong4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypertension is the most common chronic disease and is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality. Its screening, diagnosis, and management depend heavily on accurate blood pressure (BP) measurement. It is recommended that the diagnosis of hypertension should be confirmed or corroborated by out-of-office BP values, measured using ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) and home BP monitoring (HBPM). When office BP is used, automated office BP (AOBP) measurement method, which automatically provides an average of 3-5 BP readings, should be preferred. This study aimed to describe the BP measurement methods commonly used by doctors in primary care in Hong Kong, to screen, diagnose, and manage hypertensive patients.Entities:
Keywords: Ambulatory BP monitoring; Automated office BP; Blood pressure measurement; Doctors’ behaviour; Home BP monitoring; Hypertension; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32456619 PMCID: PMC7251842 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-020-01153-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Practices of family doctors to screen, diagnose, and manage hypertension
| BP Measurement Method | Screening | Diagnosis | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manual BP in the office with mercury or aneroid device | 272 (63.1%) | 216 (56.4%) | 320 (72.4%) |
| Manual BP in the office with an electronic device | 87 (20.2%) | 48 (12.5%) | 128 (29%) |
| AOBP measured using BpTRU, Omron 907XL, or Microlife WatchBP Office (Welch Allyn ProBP 2400) | 59 (13.7%) | 20 (5.2%) | 88 (19.9%) |
| Other patient-activated electronic devices in the office | 10 (2.3%) | 7 (1.8%) | 24 (5.4%) |
| Electronic BP kiosks | 3 (0.7%) | 1 (0.3%) | 8 (1.8%) |
| Ambulatory BP monitoring (24-h to 48-h BP monitoring) | N/A | 6 (1.6%) | 18 (4.1%) |
| Home BP monitoring | 85 (22.2%) | 251 (56.8%) | |
| Others | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0) | 3 (0.7%) |
Abbreviations: BP blood pressure, AOBP automated office BP
Demographic data of respondents
| Characteristic | Number (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | |
| • < 35 | 5 (1.1%) |
| • 35–39 | 11 (2.5%) |
| • 40–44 | 35 (8.0%) |
| • 45–49 | 36 (8.3%) |
| • 50–54 | 59 (13.5%) |
| • 55–59 | 56 (12.8%) |
| • 60 or above | 234 (53.7%) |
| Sex | |
| • Male | 354 (81.9%) |
| Work sector | |
| • Hospital Authority | 7 (1.6%) |
| • Private Clinic or Hospital | 418 (95.9%) |
| • University Clinics | 2 (0.5%) |
| • Academics | 1 (0.2%) |
| • Others | 8 (1.8%) |
| Specialist degree in family medicine | |
| • Yes | 92 (21.1%) |
Relationship between demographic data and BP measurement behaviour
| Using AOBP screening | using out-of-office BP for HT diagnosis | Using AOBP during HT treatment | Using HBPM for HT treatment | Taking multiple readings in single clinic visit | Taking ≥12 HBPM readings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| age < 60 | RR 0.95 ( | RR 1.06 ( | RR 0.81 ( | |||
| sex = female | OR 1.4 (95%CI: 0.85–2.47; | RR 1.37 ( | OR 1.44 (95%CI: 0.85–2.4; | RR 1.04 ( | RR 0.93 (p = 0.45) | |
| work = private | RR 1.18 ( | RR 1.69 ( | RR 0.58 ( | RR 1.15 ( | RR 0.92 ( | RR 1.38 ( |
| FM specialist | RR 1.20 ( | RR 1.35 (p = 0.16) | RR 0.95 (p = 0.63) | RR 1.00 ( |
Abbreviations: BP blood pressure, AOBP automated BP measurement, HT hypertension, HBPM home BP monitoring, FM Family Medicine
aOR Odd ratio, RR relative risk, 95%CI 95% confidence intervals
bOdd ratio is presented if the predictors are analysed by multiple logistic regression (see statistical method)