COVID-19 pandemic impact on hypertension management in North East London: an observational cohort study using electronic health records

被引:0
|
作者
Rison, Stuart Christopher Gorthorn [1 ,2 ]
Redfern, Oliver C. [3 ]
Mathur, Rohini [1 ]
Dostal, Isabel [1 ]
Carvalho, Chris [1 ,2 ]
Raisi-Estabragh, Zahra [4 ,5 ]
Robson, John [1 ]
机构
[1] Queen Mary Univ London, Wolfson Inst Populat Hlth, Ctr Primary Care, Clin Effectiveness Grp, London, England
[2] NHS North East London, Integrated Care Syst, London, England
[3] Univ Oxford, Nuffield Dept Clin Neurosci, Oxford, England
[4] St Bartholomews Hosp, Barts Heart Ctr, London, England
[5] Queen Mary Univ London, William Harvey Res Inst, London, England
来源
BMJ OPEN | 2024年 / 14卷 / 08期
关键词
Hypertension; Blood Pressure; Health Equity; Primary Care; Cardiovascular Disease; PUBLIC HEALTH; RESISTANT HYPERTENSION; PREVALENCE;
D O I
10.1136/bmjopen-2023-083497
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective: There are established inequities in the monitoring and management of hypertension in England. The COVID-19 pandemic had a major impact on primary care management of long-term conditions such as hypertension. This study investigated the possible disproportionate impact of the pandemic across patient groups. Design: Open cohort of people with diagnosed hypertension. Settings: North East London primary care practices from January 2019 to October 2022. Participants: All 224 329 adults with hypertension registered in 193 primary care practices. Outcomes: Monitoring and management of hypertension were assessed using two indicators: (i) blood pressure recorded within 1 year of the index date and (ii) blood pressure control to national clinical practice guidelines. Results: The proportion of patients with a contemporaneous blood pressure recording fell from a 91% pre-pandemic peak to 62% at the end of the pandemic lockdown and improved to 77% by the end of the study. This was paralleled by the proportion of individuals with controlled hypertension which fell from a 73% pre-pandemic peak to 50% at the end of the pandemic lockdown and improved to 60% by the end of the study. However, when excluding patients without a recent blood pressure recording, the proportions of patients with controlled hypertension increased to 81%, 80% and 78% respectively.Throughout the study, in comparison to the White ethnic group, the Black ethnic group was less likely to achieve adequate blood pressure control (ORs 0.81 (95% CI 0.78 to 0.85, p<0.001) to 0.87 (95% CI 0.84 to 0.91, p<0.001)). Conversely, the Asian ethnic group was more likely to have controlled blood pressure (ORs 1.09 (95% CI 1.05 to 1.14, p<0.001) to 1.28 (95% CI 1.23 to 1.32, p<0.001)). Men, younger individuals, more affluent individuals, individuals with unknown or unrecorded ethnicity or those untreated were also less likely to have blood pressure control to target throughout the study. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic had a greater impact on blood pressure recording than on blood pressure control. Inequities in blood pressure control persisted during the pandemic and remain outstanding.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Hypertension management in the COVID-19 era. Getaway from pandemic snares
    Wolf, Jacek
    Narkiewicz, Krzysztof
    ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION, 2021, 25 (03): : 93 - 99
  • [22] Impact of the virtual anti-hypertensive educational campaign towards knowledge, attitude, and practice of hypertension management during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Andrianto, Andrianto
    Ardiana, Meity
    Nugraha, Ricardo Adrian
    Yutha, Alqi
    Khrisna, Bagus Putra Dharma
    Putra, Tony Santoso
    Shahab, Achmad Rizal
    Andrianto, Henny
    Kikuko, Irawati Hajar
    Puspitasari, A'rofah Nurlina
    Hajjrin, Maltadilla Ratu
    WORLD JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2022, 14 (12): : 626 - 639
  • [23] Pediatric BMI changes during COVID-19 pandemic: An electronic health record-based retrospective cohort study
    Brooks, Corinne G.
    Spencer, Jessica R.
    Sprafka, J. Michael
    Roehl, Kimberly A.
    Ma, Junjie
    Londhe, Ajit A.
    He, Fang
    Cheng, Alvan
    Brown, Carolyn A.
    Page, John
    ECLINICALMEDICINE, 2021, 38
  • [24] Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women's perinatal mental health and its association with personality traits: An observational study
    Birkelund, Karine S.
    Rasmussen, Solrun S.
    Shwank, Simone E.
    Johnson, Jonas
    Acharya, Ganesh
    ACTA OBSTETRICIA ET GYNECOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 2023, 102 (03) : 270 - 281
  • [25] Anaesthesia global health programmes in North America: organisational structures and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic
    Pakala, Swetha
    Brouillette, Mark
    Thom, DeSean
    Hargett, Mary J.
    Reddy, Niyam
    Gbaje, Ejiro
    Thakkar, Niharika
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2023, 130 (04) : E445 - E447
  • [26] Patterns of knee osteoarthritis management in general practice: a retrospective cohort study using electronic health records
    Arslan, Ilgin G.
    van Berkel, A. C.
    Damen, J.
    Bindels, P.
    de Wilde, M.
    Bierma-Zeinstra, S. M. A.
    Schiphof, D.
    BMC PRIMARY CARE, 2024, 25 (01):
  • [27] The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on mental health of health care workers
    Bener, Abdulbari
    Atak, Muhammed
    Kurtulus, Dilara
    Koyuncu, Oguzhan
    Barisik, Cem C.
    Bhugra, Dinesh
    Ventriglio, Antonio
    MINERVA PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 63 (04): : 339 - 346
  • [28] The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Uptake of Influenza Vaccine: UK-Wide Observational Study
    Bachtiger, Patrik
    Adamson, Alexander
    Chow, Ji-Jian
    Sisodia, Rupa
    Quint, Jennifer K.
    Peters, Nicholas S.
    JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE, 2021, 7 (04):
  • [29] Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on California Farmworkers' Mental Health and Food Security
    Mora, Ana M.
    Lewnard, Joseph A.
    Rauch, Stephen
    Kogut, Katherine
    Jewell, Nicholas
    Cuevas, Maximiliano
    Eskenazi, Brenda
    JOURNAL OF AGROMEDICINE, 2022, 27 (03) : 303 - 314
  • [30] The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on blood pressure control in patients with treated hypertension-results of the European Society of Hypertension Study (ESH ABPM COVID-19 Study)
    Wojciechowska, Wiktoria
    Rajzer, Marek
    Kreutz, Reinhold
    Weber, Thomas
    Bursztyn, Michael
    Persu, Alexandre
    Stergiou, George
    Parati, Gianfranco
    Bilo, Grzegorz
    Pac, Agnieszka
    Grassi, Guido
    Mancia, Giuseppe
    Januszewicz, Andrzej
    Chrostowska, Marzena
    Narkiewicz, Krzysztof
    Dubiela, Andzelina
    Doumas, Michaelis
    Imprialos, Konstantinos
    Stavropoulos, Konstantinos
    de Freminville, Jean-Baptiste
    Azizi, Michel
    Cunha, Pedro Guimaraes
    Lewandowski, Jacek
    Strzelczyk, Jakub
    Wuerzner, Gregoire
    Gosk-Przybylek, Maria
    Szwench-Pietrasz, Elzbieta
    Prejbisz, Aleksander
    Van der Niepen, Patricia
    Kahan, Thomas
    Jekell, Andreas
    Spaak, Jonas
    Tsioufis, Konstantinos
    Ehret, Georg
    Doroszko, Adrian
    Kubalski, Piotr
    Polonia, Jorge
    Styczkiewicz, Katarzyna
    Styczkiewicz, Marek
    Mazur, Stanislaw
    Veglio, Franco
    Rabbia, Franco
    Eula, Elisabetta
    Aguila, Fernando Jaen
    Sarzani, Riccardo
    Spannella, Francesco
    Jarai, Zoltan
    Papadopoulos, Dimitrios
    Lopez-Sublet, Marilucy
    Ostrowska, Aleksandra
    JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2024, 42 (12) : 2065 - 2074