Health
Follow new BP guidelines and avoid heart disease
Washington, Jan 29
If new hypertension
guidelines are followed sincerely, it could help us significantly
prevent deaths owing to cardiovascular diseases (CVD) each year without
increasing overall health care costs, an analysis conducted by
researchers at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) found.
“Our
findings clearly show that it would be worthwhile to significantly
increase spending on office visits, home blood pressure monitoring and
interventions to improve treatment adherence,†said lead author Andrew
E. Moran, the Herbert Irving Assistant Professor of Medicine at CUMC.
“In
fact, we could double treatment and monitoring spending for some
patients - namely those with severe hypertension - and still break
even,†he added.
In the new guidelines released by the US
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, stage 1 hypertension is
defined as a systolic BP of 140-159 mm Hg or a diastolic BP of 90-99 mm
Hg.
Stage 2 or severe hypertension is a systolic BP of 160 mm Hg or higher or a diastolic BP of 100 mm Hg or higher.
The 2014 guidelines are less aggressive for some patients, shifting treatment targets to higher blood pressures.
Fewer
patients need treatment under the new guidelines, but according to
Moran “even with the more relaxed goals, an estimated 44 percent of
adults with hypertension, or 28 million people, still do not have their
blood pressure adequately controlledâ€.
“Given rising health care
costs and limited budgets, it is important to determine the
cost-effectiveness of implementing the new guidelines and whether we
should focus on specific patient subgroups,†added study leader Lee
Goldman, Harold and Margaret Hatch Professor of the University.
The
researchers found that full implementation of the new guidelines would
save costs by reducing mortality and morbidity related to CVD.
“The
overall message of our study is that every segment of our health care
system, from small medical practices to large insurance companies, can
benefit by improving treatment of hypertension,†Moran said.
The paper was published online in the New England Journal of Medicine.