Hospital-based intervention to enhance hypertension diagnosis in Kalasin hospital, Thailand, 2017-2019: A pre-post pilot intervention study

J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich). 2020 Aug;22(8):1310-1320. doi: 10.1111/jch.13953. Epub 2020 Aug 4.

Abstract

In Thailand 5.9 million individuals ≥15 years old have undiagnosed hypertension. The intervention to reduce undiagnosed hypertension was piloted and aimed to compare pre- and post-intervention hypertension diagnosis rate and follow-up rate. A hospital-based pre- and post-intervention study was piloted in a general hospital in Thailand. The intervention included an electronic pop-up alert when raised blood pressure was observed and a follow-up protocol. The follow-up protocol entered patient information in a follow-up book that scheduled an appointment to recheck blood pressure. Statistical analyses compared the rate of hypertension diagnosis and follow-up between the pre- and post-intervention periods, adjusted for differences in baseline characteristics. A post-intervention, self-report survey among nurses and nurse-aids explored perceptions about raised blood pressure management and solicited suggestions to improve the intervention. 574 raised blood pressure patients visited the hospital in the pre-intervention period; 27.4% returned for follow--up; and hypertension diagnosis rate was 1.4%. Among 686 post-intervention raised blood pressure patients, overall hypertension diagnosis rate improved to 6.1%. In per-protocol patients, 81.9% were booked to follow--up, hypertension diagnosis rate was 18.6%, and the adjusted odds ratio of hypertension diagnosis was 4.5 times higher compared with the pre-intervention period. By self-report, 20% of health workers had no time to provide the follow-up book due to work overload, yet >57% reported that information technology improved detection of raised blood pressure and improved follow-up. The interventions significantly increased the hypertension diagnosis rate and follow-up among raised blood pressure patients in a single hospital but may benefit from incorporating an information technology-assisted follow-up protocol.

Keywords: hospital-based; hypertension; pilot study; screening.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Blood Pressure
  • Hospitals
  • Humans
  • Hypertension* / diagnosis
  • Hypertension* / epidemiology
  • Pilot Projects
  • Thailand