Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Durham Veterns Affairs Medical Center, Durham, NC 27705, USA.
Hypertension. 2011 Oct;58(4):552-8. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.174367. Epub 2011 Aug 15.
Clinical inertia represents a barrier to hypertension management. As part of a hypertension telemanagement trial designed to overcome clinical inertia, we evaluated study physician reactions to elevated home blood pressures. We studied 296 patients from the Hypertension Intervention Nurse Telemedicine Study who received telemonitoring and study physician medication management. When a patient's 2-week mean home blood pressure was elevated, an "intervention alert" prompted study physicians to consider treatment intensification. We examined treatment intensification rates and subsequent blood pressure control. Patients generated 1216 intervention alerts during the 18-month intervention. Of 922 eligible intervention alerts, study physicians intensified treatment in 374 (40.6%). Study physician perception that home blood pressure was acceptable was the most common rationale for nonintensification (53.7%). When "blood pressure acceptable" was the reason for not intensifying treatment, the mean blood pressure was lower than for intervention alerts where treatment intensification occurred (135.3/76.7 versus 143.2/80.6 mm Hg; P<0.0001). Blood pressure acceptable intervention alerts were associated with the lowest incidence of repeat alerts (hazard ratio: 0.69 [95% CI: 0.58 to 0.83]), meaning that the patient home blood pressure was less likely to subsequently rise above goal, despite apparent clinical inertia. This telemedicine intervention targeting clinical inertia did not guarantee treatment intensification in response to elevated home blood pressures. However, when physicians did not intensify treatment, it was because blood pressure was closer to an acceptable threshold, and repeat blood pressure elevations occurred less frequently. Failure to intensify treatment when home blood pressure is elevated may, at times, represent good clinical judgment, not clinical inertia.
临床惰性是高血压管理的障碍。作为旨在克服临床惰性的高血压远程管理试验的一部分,我们评估了研究医生对升高的家庭血压的反应。我们研究了参加高血压干预护士远程医疗研究的 296 名患者,他们接受了远程监测和研究医生的药物管理。当患者的 2 周平均家庭血压升高时,“干预警报”提示研究医生考虑加强治疗。我们检查了治疗强化率和随后的血压控制情况。患者在 18 个月的干预期间共产生了 1216 次干预警报。在 922 次符合条件的干预警报中,研究医生强化治疗的有 374 次(40.6%)。研究医生认为家庭血压可接受是最常见的不强化治疗的理由(53.7%)。当“血压可接受”是不强化治疗的原因时,平均血压低于强化治疗的干预警报(135.3/76.7 与 143.2/80.6mmHg;P<0.0001)。血压可接受的干预警报与重复警报的发生率最低相关(危险比:0.69[95%CI:0.58 至 0.83]),这意味着尽管存在明显的临床惰性,但患者的家庭血压随后升高至目标的可能性较小。这种针对临床惰性的远程医疗干预并不能保证在家庭血压升高时加强治疗。然而,当医生不加强治疗时,这是因为血压更接近可接受的阈值,并且重复的血压升高发生的频率较低。当家庭血压升高时不加强治疗有时可能代表良好的临床判断,而不是临床惰性。