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Family Practice Advance Access published online on November 3, 2009

Family Practice, doi:10.1093/fampra/cmp075
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Effectiveness of a protocol-based strategy for achieving better blood pressure control in general practice

Marshall Godwina, Richard Birtwhistleb, Rachelle Seguinc, Miu Lamd, Ian Cassonb, Dianne Delvab and Susan MacDonaldb

a Department of Family Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland
b Department of Family Medicine, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario
c Queen’s University
d Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

Correspondence to Marshall Godwin, Primary Healthcare Research Unit, Room 1776, Health Sciences Centre, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 300 Prince Philip Drive, St. John’s, NL A1B 3V6, Canada; E-mail: godwinm{at}mun.ca

Received 21 November 2008; Revised 4 September 2009; Accepted 29 September 2009.


   Abstract

Background. There continues be a problem with the proportion of treated hypertension patients who are actually at recommended blood pressure targets.

Objective. Is an intensive protocol-based strategy for achieving blood pressure control effective in family practice and will family physicians and their hypertensive patients adhere to such a protocol.

Methods. Design of the study is a cluster randomized controlled trial at the Centre for Studies in Primary Care, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. Participants were 19 family physicians and 156 (98 intervention group and 58 control group) of their patients in and around the Kingston area. Patients were eligible if they had a diagnosis of hypertension and had not yet achieved their target blood pressure. Patients in the intervention group were managed according to a protocol that involved seeing their family doctor every 2 weeks over a 16-week period and having their antihypertensive medication regimen adjusted at each visit if target was not achieved. This was compared to usual care. Main outcomes were primary effectiveness outcome measured at 12 months was the differences in blood pressure between baseline and 12 months in the two groups. Secondary effectiveness outcomes included rates of achieving BP target and compliance with protocol by physicians and patients. Adherence outcomes were assessed by determining the number of visits made during the 16-week intervention period and the increase in the number of drugs being used.

Results. Of the patients enrolled, 72 (74%) from the intervention group and 41 (71%) in the control group were available for analysis. Improvement between baseline and 12-month follow-up was significantly better for the intervention group than the control for diastolic mean daytime BP on 24 hours ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (4.5 mmHg reduction versus 0.5 mmHg reduction) and for both systolic (14.7 mmHg reduction versus 2.7 mmHg reduction) and diastolic (7.4 mmHg reduction versus 0.6 mmHg increase) blood pressure on BpTRU. Of the 98 patients in the intervention, 80% attended four or more of the eight visits and 25% attended all eight visits; physicians increased the number or dosage of drugs the patient was taking in 52% of the visits.

Conclusions. An intensive, protocol-based, management approach to achieving blood pressure control in hypertensive patients in family practice is effective and works even when there is flexibility built into the algorithm to allow family physicians to use their judgement in individual patients.

Keywords. Clinical trial, hypertension, pragmatic.


Godwin M, Birtwhistle R, Seguin R, Lam M, Casson I, Delva D and MacDonald S. Effectiveness of a protocol-based strategy for achieving better blood pressure control in general practice. Family Practice 2009; Pages 1–7 of 7.


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