Screening for High Blood Pressure in Adults During Ambulatory Nonprimary Care Visits: Opportunities to Improve Hypertension Recognition

The Journal of Clinical Hypertension
Joel HandlerCorinna Koebnick

Abstract

Visits with nonprimary care providers such as optometrists may be missed opportunities for the detection of high blood pressure (BP). For this study, normotensive adults with at least 12 months of health plan membership on January 1, 2009 (n=1,075,522) were followed-up for high BP through March 14, 2011. Of 111,996 patients with a BP measurement ≥140/90 mm Hg, 82.7% were measured during primary care visits and 17.3% during nonprimary care visits. Individuals with a BP ≥140/90 mm Hg measured during nonprimary care visits were older and more likely to be male and non-Hispanic white. The proportion of patients with follow-up and false-positives were comparable between primary and nonprimary care. The main nonprimary care specialty to identify a first BP ≥140/90 mm Hg was ophthalmology/optometry with 24.5% of all patients. Results suggest that expanding screening for hypertension to nonprimary care settings may improve the detection of hypertension.

References

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May 3, 2014·The Canadian Journal of Cardiology·John J SimMichael H Kanter

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Citations

Mar 17, 2015·The Journal of Clinical Hypertension·David S Kountz
Mar 9, 2005·Kidney International. Supplement·Haiyan WangJicheng Lv
May 8, 2020·The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews·Bey-Marrié SchmidtTamara Kredo

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