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Title: | Cost-accuracy and patient experience assessment of blood pressure monitoring methods to diagnose hypertension: A comparative effectiveness study |
Author: | González-de Paz L Kostov B Freixa X Herranz C Lagarda E Ortega M Perez E Porcar S Sánchez E Serrato M Vidiella I Siso-Almirall A |
Keywords: | adults Cost analysis cost-effectiveness research Home hypertension diagnosis Patient experience PRIMARY CARE Variability WORKING GROUP Blood Pressure Cost analysis cost-effectiveness research European-Society hypertension diagnosis patient experience Primary Care |
Publisher: | Frontiers Media S.A. |
Abstract: | Studies of the diagnosis of hypertension have emphasized long-term cost-effectiveness analysis, but the patient experience and costs of blood pressure monitoring methods at the diagnosis stage remain unclear. We studied four diagnostic methods: a new 1 h-automated office blood pressure (BP) monitoring, office BP measurement, home BP monitoring, and awake-ambulatory BP monitoring.We carried out a comparative effectiveness study of four methods of diagnosing hypertension in 500 participants with a clinical suspicion of hypertension from three primary healthcare (PHC) centers in Barcelona city (Spain). We evaluated the time required and the intrinsic and extrinsic costs of the four methods. The cost-accuracy ratio was calculated and differences between methods were assessed using ANOVA and Tukey's honestly significant difference (HSD) post-hoc test. Patient experience data were transformed using Rasch analysis and re-scaled from 0 to 10.Office BP measurement was the most expensive method (€156.82, 95% CI: 156.18-157.46) and 1 h-automated BP measurement the cheapest (€85.91, 95% CI: 85.59-86.23). 1 h-automated BP measurement had the best cost-accuracy ratio (€ 1.19) and office BP measurement the worst (€ 2.34). Home BP monitoring (8.01, 95% CI: 7.70-8.22), and 1 h-automated BP measurement (7.99, 95% CI: 7.80-8.18) had the greatest patient approval: 66.94% of participants would recommend 1 h-automated BP measurement as the first or second option.The relationship between the cost-accuracy ratio and the patient experience suggests physicians could use the new 1 h-automated BP measurement as the first option and awake-ambulatory BP monitoring in complicated cases and cease diagnosing hypertension using office BP measurement.Copyright © 2022 González-de Paz, Kostov, Freixa, Herranz, Lagarda, Ortega, Pérez, Porcar, Sánchez, Serrato, Vidiella and Sisó-Almirall. |
Note: | Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.827821 |
It is part of: | Frontiers In Medicine, 2022, 9, 827821-NA |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/2445/209148 |
Related resource: | https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.827821 |
ISSN: | González-de Paz L;Kostov B;Freixa X;Herranz C;Lagarda E;Ortega M;Perez E;Porcar S;Sánchez E;Serrato M;Vidiella I;Siso-Almirall A. Cost-accuracy and patient experience assessment of blood pressure monitoring methods to diagnose hypertension: A comparative effectiveness study. Frontiers In Medicine, 2022, 9, 827821-NA |
Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (IDIBAPS: Institut d'investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer) |
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Cost-accuracy and patient experience assessment of blood pressure monitoring methods_FrontiersInMedicine.pdf | 1.1 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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