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Journal article · 2010

Quality indicators to measure blood pressure management over a time interval

Thusitha Mabotuwana, Jim Warren, Raina Elley, John Kennelly, Chris Paton, Kuinileti Wai and Stewart Wells

Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics, 18(3): 149-156

Open access

Abstract

Background Quality indicators are an important part of the primary care landscape, but focus strongly on point-in-time measurements, such as a patient's last blood pressure (BP) measurement. There is a larger space of possible measurements, including ones that more explicitly consider management over an interval of time. Objective To determine the predictive abilities of five different quality indicators related to poor BP control. Methods Data from two New Zealand general practices was analysed on five BP control indicators for patients with diagnosed hypertension: 1) last BP high (>150/90 mmHg); 2) last BP high or no BP measurement; 3) two or more consistently high BP measurements for ≥ 90 days; 4) a high BP then lapse of >120 days in BP measurement; and 5) antihypertensive medication possession ratio (MPR) of Results Positive predictive value (PPV) of indicators for the same indicator nine months later ranged from 27% (last BP high) to 64% (MPR). PPVs among the five measures with respect to the same time period ranged from 9% to 77% (median 33%). Conclusions Modest PPVs between indicators suggest the importance of considering multiple indicators to incentivise best management across diverse aspects of BP control.

Cite

Mabotuwana, T., Warren, J., Elley, R., Kennelly, J., Paton, C., Wai, K., Wells, S. (2010). Quality indicators to measure blood pressure management over a time interval. Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics, 18, 149-156. https://doi.org/10.14236/jhi.v18i3.767