Patients who need a blood pressure test might not need to visit their GP thanks to a digital system that makes it easier to send results to their doctor.
People using the streamlined system—which sends data over the internet or text—had better blood pressure control compared with patients receiving standard care, researchers found.
COVID-19
The technique has been adopted by the majority of NHS boards in Scotland and could be vital to rural communities and those shielding during the COVID-19 crisis, experts said.
High blood pressure is the biggest treatable cause of stroke and heart attack and is typically monitored by nurses in local practices.
There are some 12 million of these appointments each year in the UK.
Barriers
Research studies have previously shown that at-home monitoring can help keep blood pressure in check better than routine care but GP practices have been slow to roll this out.
Doctors say this is partly due to workload and difficulties adapting home results to the surgery’s computing processes.
Researchers at the University worked with 3200 patients across 75 GP practices in NHS Lothian to improve the process.
They developed an integrated set-up that provides regular summaries of home readings to GPs, which delivers test scores alongside routine lab results.
In a group of eight practices, they found that there was a fall in blood pressure in people using the system—called Scale-Up BP—compared with those receiving standard care.
Scale-Up BP
Patients also needed less face-to-face appointments compared with the previous year, suggesting that the system was having an overall benefit on their health, the study found.
Researchers cautioned that those with the worst blood pressure scores were more likely to stop using the system and the reasons why should be explored.
The system, which won the Clinical Improvement Award: Public Health and Prevention at the General Practice Awards, has now been adopted in 358 practices across 11 of the 13 NHS Boards in Scotland.
“We believe our new system could help GP surgeries adhere to social distancing during the COVID-19 epidemic and will be of help to remote communities, such as those in the Highlands and Islands,” says Professor Brian McKinstry, University of Edinburgh.
Source: Read Full Article