The Lancet Regional Health. Western Pacific (Feb 2024)

Quality in screening and measuring blood pressure in China's primary health care: a national cross-sectional study using unannounced standardized patientsResearch in context

  • Lanping Zhang,
  • Huijuan Liang,
  • Huanyuan Luo,
  • Wenjun He,
  • Yiyuan Cai,
  • Siyuan Liu,
  • Yancun Fan,
  • Wenxiu Huang,
  • Qing Zhao,
  • Dongmei Zhong,
  • Jiaqi Li,
  • Sensen Lv,
  • Chunping Li,
  • Yunyun Xie,
  • Nan Zhang,
  • Dong (Roman) Xu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43
p. 100973

Abstract

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Summary: Background: This study aims to evaluate primary care providers' adherence to the standard of measuring blood pressure for people aged 35 or above during their initial visit, as per Chinese guidelines, and to identify factors affecting their practices. Methods: We developed 11 standardized patients (SP) cases as tracer conditions to evaluate primary care, and deployed trained SPs for unannounced visits to randomly selected providers in seven provinces of China. The SPs used a checklist based on guidelines to record whether and how blood pressure was measured. Data were analyzed descriptively and regression analysis was performed to examine the association between outcomes and factors such as provider, patient, facility, and clinical case characteristics. Findings: The SPs conducted 1201 visits and found that less than one-third of USPs ≥35 had their blood pressure measured. Only 26.9% of migraine and 15.4% of diabetes cases received blood pressure measurements. Additionally, these measurements did not follow the proper guidelines and recommended steps. On average, 55.6% of the steps were followed with few providers considering influencing factors before measurement and only 6.0% of patients received both-arm measurements. The use of wrist sphygmomanometers was associated with poor blood pressure measurement. Interpretation: In China, primary care hypertension screening practices fall short of guidelines, with infrequent initiation of blood pressure measurements and inadequate adherence to proper measurement steps. To address this, priority should be placed on adopting, implementing, and upholding guidelines for hypertension screening and measurement. Funding: National Natural Science Foundation of China, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, Doctoral Fund Project of Inner Mongolia Medical University, China Postdoctoral Science Foundation.

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