Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Background:
Hypertension
(
HTN
) in people with diabetes doubles the risk of cardiovascular disease. Prior patient activation studies largely show improved communication but little impact on behavior or health outcomes. We sought to 1) assess the impact of Office-Based Guidelines Applied to Practice (Office-GAP) Program on blood pressure (BP) control; 2) determine the rate and predictors of BP control in patients with
HTN
and/or diabetes mellitus (DM) in federally qualified health centers.
Methods:
Sample: Patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) and/or DM with history of
HTN
; analyzed patients with DM and
HTN
compared to
HTN
without DM.
MDM
Policy Pract
PMID:Blood Pressure Control in Hypertensive Patients in Federally Qualified Health Centers: Impact of Shared Decision Making in the Office-GAP Program. 3028 1
Background:
Results of previous research have identified the need for further investigation into the compliance with good practice guidelines for current decision-analytic modeling (DAM).
Objective:
To identify the extent to which recent model-based economic evaluations of interventions focused on lowering the blood pressure (BP) of patients with
hypertension
conform to published guidelines for DAM in health care using a five-dimension framework developed to assess compliance to DAM guidelines.
Methods:
A systematic review of English language articles was undertaken to identify published model-based economic evaluations that examined interventions aimed at lowering BP. The review covered the period January 2000 to March 2015 and included the following electronic bibliographic databases: EMBASE and Medline via Ovid interface and the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination's (CRD) NHS-EED. Data were extracted based on different components of good practice across five dimensions utilizing a framework to assess compliance to DAM guidelines.
Results:
Thirteen articles were included in this review. The review found limited compliance to good practice DAM guidelines, which was most frequently justified by the lack of data.
Conclusions:
The assessment of structural uncertainty cannot yet be considered common practice in primary prevention and management of
hypertension
, and researchers seem to face difficulties with identifying sources of structural uncertainty and then handling them correctly. Additional guidelines are needed to aid researchers in identifying and managing sources of potential structural uncertainty. Adherence to guidelines is not always possible and it does pose challenges, in particular when there are limitations due to data availability that restrict, for example, a validation process.
MDM
Policy Pract
PMID:Do Economic Evaluations in Primary Care Prevention and the Management of Hypertension Conform to Good Practice Guidelines? A Systematic Review. 3028 7
Background:
Markov decision process (MDP) models are powerful tools. They enable the derivation of optimal treatment policies but may incur long computational times and generate decision rules that are challenging to interpret by physicians.
Methods:
In an effort to improve usability and interpretability, we examined whether Poisson regression can approximate optimal
hypertension
treatment policies derived by an MDP for maximizing a patient's expected discounted quality-adjusted life years.
Results:
We found that our Poisson approximation to the optimal treatment policy matched the optimal policy in 99% of cases. This high accuracy translates to nearly identical health outcomes for patients. Furthermore, the Poisson approximation results in 104 additional quality-adjusted life years per 1000 patients compared to the Seventh Joint National Committee's treatment guidelines for
hypertension
. The comparative health performance of the Poisson approximation was robust to the cardiovascular disease risk calculator used and calculator calibration error.
Limitations:
Our results are based on Markov chain modeling.
Conclusions:
Poisson model approximation for blood pressure treatment planning has high fidelity to optimal MDP treatment policies, which can improve usability and enhance transparency of more personalized treatment policies.
MDM
Policy Pract
PMID:Data-Driven Markov Decision Process Approximations for Personalized Hypertension Treatment Planning. 3028 9
Background:
The relative value of universal compared to contingent approaches to communication and behavioral interventions for persons of low health literacy remains unknown.
Objective:
To examine the effectiveness of interventions that are tailored to individual health literacy level compared to nontailored interventions on health-related outcomes.
Design:
Systematic review.
Data Sources:
PubMed and Embase databases.
Eligibility Criteria:
Studies were eligible if they were in English, used an experimental or observational design, included an intervention that was tailored based on the individual's level of education, health literacy or health numeracy, and had a comparator group in which the intervention was not tailored to individual characteristics.
Review Methods:
Databases were searched from inception to January 2016, and the retrieved reference lists hand searched. Abstracts that met PICOS criteria underwent dual review for data extraction to assess study details and study quality. A qualitative synthesis was conducted.
Results:
Of 2,323 unique citations, 458 underwent full review, and 9 met criteria for the systematic review. Five studies were positive and rated as good quality, 3 were negative with 2 of those of good quality, and 1 had mixed results (fair quality). Positive studies were conducted in the clinical domains of
hypertension
, diabetes, and depression with interventions including educational materials, disease management sessions, literacy training, and physician notification of limited health literacy among patients. Negative studies were conducted in the clinical domains of heart disease, glaucoma, and nutrition with interventions including medication reconciliation and educational materials.
Conclusions:
Tailoring communication and behavioral interventions to the individual level of health literacy may be an effective strategy to improve knowledge and indicators of disease control in selected clinical settings.
MDM
Policy Pract
PMID:Tailoring Educational and Behavioral Interventions to Level of Health Literacy: A Systematic Review. 3028 24