News

Prompts Improved Rx Compliance, Not BP Control


 

TORONTO — Computerized reminders that were flashed to primary care physicians as they checked and recorded their patients' blood pressures led to a small but significant improvement in the rate of prescribing drugs that followed hypertension-management guidelines.

But in this study, which randomized 14 general medicine clinics to either use or no use of the computer-generated reminders, automated prompts had no effect on the rate at which patients had their BP controlled to target levels, according to Dr. LeRoi S. Hicks, an internal medicine physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

It's possible that improved BP control could be achieved by not only prompting physicians to use the right drugs, but also prompting them to use the right dosage or to add more drugs when needed, Dr. Hicks said at the 14th World Congress on Heart Disease.

The study involved eight community-based and six hospital-based general medical clinics in the Boston area during July 2003-February 2005. The physicians at seven of the clinics were randomized to treat patients for hypertension by their usual practice. In the other seven clinics, when physicians measured their patients' BPs and then entered the readings in each patient's computerized record, they received a computer-generated reminder telling them which drugs to preferentially use to control BP. The study included 786 patients treated using the computer-generated messages, and 1,048 patients treated by usual care.

The drug recommendations were based on the sixth report of the Joint National Commission on the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC 6), the prevailing guideline when the study began.

The two patient groups were similar by age, ethnic and racial profile, insurance coverage, and baseline level of BP control. About 43% of patients in each group were at their goal BP when the study began. Nearly 90% were on JNC 6-compliant regimens at baseline. During an average follow-up of about 1.5 years, the computer-generated prompts had essentially no effect on the extent of BP control. Target pressures were reached by 45% of patients in the usual care group and by 48% in the intervention group, a nonsignificant difference, reported Dr. Hicks at the congress, sponsored by the International Academy of Cardiology.

But the computerized decision support system led to a small but significant rise in prescribing compliance with the JNC 6 guidelines when this was assessed 7 days after each patient's medical visit. The computerized prompts were linked with a 32% increased rate of compliance, compared with the control patients, after adjustment for baseline differences in demographic and clinical parameters. But because most patients (nearly 90%) were in compliance at baseline, the absolute amount of increased compliance achieved by the intervention was modest, Dr. Hicks said.

Automated prompts had no effect on the rate at which patients had their BP controlled to target levels. DR. HICKS

Recommended Reading

Proteinuria Lowered With Telmisartan
MDedge Cardiology
After Gastric Bypass, 65% Showed Improved Hypertension
MDedge Cardiology
Small Increase in Girth, Big Increase in HT Risk
MDedge Cardiology
Sodium:Potassium 'Most Important Predictor' of CV Risk
MDedge Cardiology
CPAP Lowers Nocturnal Pressure in Apnea
MDedge Cardiology
New Anticancer Drugs Often Trigger Serious Hypertension
MDedge Cardiology
Hypertension, Hostility Tied In Children
MDedge Cardiology
Acute Severe Hypertension Tx, Outcomes Vary
MDedge Cardiology
Selenium May Help Explain Racial Differences in HT
MDedge Cardiology
Obesity May Inhibit Normal Nocturnal Dip in BP
MDedge Cardiology