Pediatric High Blood Pressure Follow-Up Guideline Adherence in a Massachusetts Health Care System

被引:2
|
作者
Goulding, Melissa [1 ,5 ]
Ryan, Grace [1 ]
Frisard, Christine [1 ]
Stevens, Elise [1 ]
Person, Sharina [2 ]
Goldberg, Robert [3 ]
Garg, Arvin [1 ,4 ]
Lemon, Stephenie C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Chan Med Sch, Dept Populat & Quantitat Hlth Sci, Div Prevent & Behav Med, Worcester, MA, Brazil
[2] Univ Massachusetts, Chan Med Sch, Dept Populat & Quantitat Hlth Sci, Hlth Serv Res, Worcester, MA USA
[3] Univ Massachusetts, Chan Med Sch, Dept Populat & Quantitat Hlth Sci, Div Epidemiol, Worcester, MA, Brazil
[4] Univ Massachusetts, Child Hlth Equ Ctr, Chan Med Sch, Dept Pediat, Worcester, MA, Brazil
[5] Populat & Quantitat Hlth Sci, 368 Plantat St, Worcester, MA 01605 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
blood pressure; guideline adherence; hypertension; UNITED-STATES; HYPERTENSION; PREVALENCE; OVERWEIGHT; ADULTHOOD; CHILDHOOD; DIAGNOSIS;
D O I
10.1016/j.acap.2023.07.006
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
OBJECTIVES: To describe adherence to the American Academy of Pediatrics' (AAP) 2017 clinical practice guidelines for follow-up after high blood pressure (BP) screening by pediatric and family medicine providers in a Massachusetts health care system and to assess differences in receipt of follow-up according to child- and clinic-level factors. METHODS: Electronic health record data were analyzed for children aged 3 to 17 years who had an outpatient primary care visit during 2018 with a high BP screening (according to AAP guidelines). We classified AAP guideline adherent follow-up as BP follow-up within 6 months after an elevated finding (+ 2-week buffer) and within 2 weeks after a hypertensive finding (+ 2-week buffer). Differences in receipt of guideline adherent follow-up by child- and clinic-level factors were assessed via multilevel mixed effects logistic regression models. RESULTS: The median age of the 4563 included children was 12 years and 43% were female. Overall, guideline adherent follow-up was received by 17.7% of children within the recommended time interval; 27.4% for those whose index BP was elevated and 5.4% for those whose index BP was hypertensive. Modeling revealed older children and those belonging to clinics with more providers, smaller patient panels, and smaller proportion of Medicaid patients were more likely to receive adherent follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Few children received guideline adherent BP follow-up and most differences in adherence were related to clinic resources. System-level interventions are needed to improve BP follow-up.
引用
收藏
页码:506 / 513
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Stroke follow-up in primary care: a Norwegian modelling study on the implications of multimorbidity for guideline adherence
    Pedersen, Rune Aakvik
    Petursson, Halfdan
    Hetlevik, Irene
    BMC FAMILY PRACTICE, 2019, 20 (01)
  • [12] Screening and Management of Pediatric High Blood Pressure-Challenges to Implementing the Clinical Practice Guideline
    Hanevold, Coral D.
    Brady, Tammy M.
    CURRENT HYPERTENSION REPORTS, 2024, 26 (06) : 259 - 271
  • [13] Blood pressure and medication changes following adrenalectomy for unilateral primary aldosteronism: a follow-up study
    van der Linden, Petra
    Steichen, Olivier
    Zinzindohoue, Franck
    Plouin, Pierre-Francois
    JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2012, 30 (04) : 761 - 769
  • [14] Connecting Rheumatology Patients to Primary Care for High Blood Pressure: Specialty Clinic Protocol Improves Follow-up and Population Blood Pressures
    Bartels, Christie M.
    Ramly, Edmond
    Johnson, Heather M.
    Lauver, Diane R.
    Panyard, Daniel J.
    Li, Zhanhai
    Sampene, Emmanuel
    Lewicki, Kristin
    McBride, Patrick E.
    ARTHRITIS CARE & RESEARCH, 2019, 71 (04) : 461 - 470
  • [15] A clinical trial to improve high blood pressure care in young urban black men - Recruitment, follow-up, and outcomes
    Hill, MN
    Bone, LR
    Hilton, SC
    Roary, MC
    Kelen, GD
    Levine, DM
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 1999, 12 (06) : 548 - 554
  • [16] Impact of short-term change of adiposity on risk of high blood pressure in children: Results from a follow-up study in China
    Yang, Yi-de
    Xie, Ming
    Zeng, Yuan
    Yuan, Shuqian
    Tang, Haokai
    Dong, Yanhui
    Zou, Zhiyong
    Dong, Bin
    Wang, Zhenghe
    Ye, Xiangli
    Hong, Xiuqin
    Xiao, Qiu
    Ma, Jun
    PLOS ONE, 2021, 16 (09):
  • [17] Association between follow-up in health services and antihypertensive medication adherence
    Silva de Albuquerque, Nila Larisse
    Saturnino de Oliveira, Andressa Suelly
    da Silva, Jacqueline Mota
    de Araujo, Thelma Leite
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE ENFERMAGEM, 2018, 71 (06) : 3006 - 3012
  • [18] Predicting failure to follow-up screened high blood pressure in Japan: a cohort study
    Kuriyama, Akira
    Takahashi, Yoshimitsu
    Tsujimura, Yuka
    Miyazaki, Kikuko
    Satoh, Toshihiko
    Ikeda, Shunya
    Nakayama, Takeo
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2015, 37 (03) : 498 - 505
  • [19] Methodological and reporting quality of systematic reviews referenced in the clinical practice guideline for pediatric high-blood pressure
    Vaughn, Kaleb
    Skinner, Mason
    Vaughn, Victoria
    Wayant, Cole
    Vassar, Matt
    JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2019, 37 (03) : 488 - 495
  • [20] Evaluating adherence to the Dutch guideline for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up of laryngeal carcinomas
    van Agthoven, M
    Heule-Dieleman, HAG
    de Boer, MF
    Kaanders, JHAM
    de Jong, RJB
    Kremer, B
    Leemans, CR
    Marres, HAM
    Manni, JJ
    Langendijk, JA
    Levendag, PC
    Tjho-Heslinga, RE
    de Jong, JMA
    Uyl-de Groot, CA
    Knegt, PP
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2005, 74 (03) : 337 - 344