Clark Christopher E, Horvath Isabella A, Taylor Rod S, Campbell John L
Primary Care Research Group, Institute of Health Services Research, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK.
Br J Gen Pract. 2014 Apr;64(621):e223-32. doi: 10.3399/bjgp14X677851.
The magnitude of the 'white coat effect', the alerting rise in blood pressure, is greater for doctors than nurses. This could bias interpretation of studies on nurse-led care in hypertension, and risks overestimating or overtreating high blood pressure by doctors in clinical practice.
To quantify differences between blood pressure measurements made by doctors and nurses.
Systematic review and meta-analysis using searches of MEDLINE, CENTRAL, CINAHL, Embase, journal collections, and conference abstracts.
Studies in adults reporting mean blood pressures measured by doctors and nurses at the same visit were selected, and mean blood pressures extracted, by two reviewers. Study risk of bias was assessed using modified Cochrane criteria. Outcomes were pooled across studies using random effects meta-analysis.
In total, 15 studies (11 hypertensive; four mixed hypertensive and normotensive populations) were included from 1899 unique citations. Compared with doctors' measurements, nurse-measured blood pressures were lower (weighted mean differences: systolic -7.0 [95% confidence interval {CI} = -4.7 to -9.2] mmHg, diastolic -3.8 [95% CI = -2.2 to -5.4] mmHg). For studies at low risk of bias, differences were lower: systolic -4.6 (95% CI = -1.9 to -7.3) mmHg; diastolic -1.7 (95% CI = -0.1 to -3.2) mmHg. White coat hypertension was diagnosed more frequently based on doctors' than on nurses' readings: relative risk 1.6 (95% CI =1.2 to 2.1).
The white coat effect is smaller for blood pressure measurements made by nurses than by doctors. This systematic difference has implications for hypertension diagnosis and management. Caution is required in pooling data from studies using both nurse- and doctor-measured blood pressures.
“白大衣效应”,即血压因警觉而升高,医生比护士更为明显。这可能会使高血压护理中由护士主导的研究的解读产生偏差,并在临床实践中存在医生高估或过度治疗高血压的风险。
量化医生和护士所测血压之间的差异。
通过检索MEDLINE、CENTRAL、CINAHL、Embase、期刊合集和会议摘要进行系统评价和荟萃分析。
选取报告了在同一次就诊时医生和护士所测平均血压的成人研究,由两名审阅者提取平均血压。使用改良的Cochrane标准评估研究的偏倚风险。采用随机效应荟萃分析对各研究的结果进行汇总。
从1899条独特的文献引用中总共纳入了15项研究(11项为高血压研究;4项为高血压和血压正常人群混合研究)。与医生所测血压相比,护士所测血压较低(加权平均差:收缩压-7.0 [95%置信区间{CI} = -4.7至-9.2] mmHg,舒张压-3.8 [95% CI = -2.2至-5.4] mmHg)。对于偏倚风险较低的研究,差异较小:收缩压-4.6(95% CI = -1.9至-7.3)mmHg;舒张压-1.7(95% CI = -0.1至-3.2)mmHg。基于医生读数诊断白大衣高血压比基于护士读数更频繁:相对风险为1.6(95% CI = 1.2至2.1)。
护士所测血压的白大衣效应小于医生所测血压。这种系统性差异对高血压的诊断和管理具有影响。在汇总使用护士和医生所测血压的研究数据时需谨慎。