New Concepts in Hypertension Management: A Population-Based Perspective
Hypertension (HTN) is the most common chronic disease in the U.S., and the standard model of office-based care delivery has yielded suboptimal outcomes, with approximately 50% of affected patients not achieving blood pressure (BP) control. Poor population-level BP control has been primarily attributed to therapeutic inertia and low patient engagement. New models of care delivery utilizing patient-generated health data, comprehensive assessment of social health determinants, computerized algorithms generating tailored interventions, frequent communication and reporting, and non-physician providers organized as an integrated practice unit, have the potential to transform population-based HTN control.
Source: Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases - Category: Cardiology Authors: Richard V. Milani, Carl J. Lavie, Jonathan K. Wilt, Robert M. Bober, Hector O. Ventura Source Type: research