Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, Volume 14, Pages 3807-3816 , 01/01/2021

Effect of the covid-19 pandemic and other predictors of true therapeutic inertia on patients with hypertension in a primary care clinic in thailand

Phoomjai Sornsenee, Polathep Vichitkunakorn, Kittisakdi Choomalee, Chonticha Romyasamit

Abstract

Introduction: Hypertension (HT) has a significant impact on health care worldwide. Therapeutic inertia (TI) is defined as the failure to intensify therapy in the absence of an optimal goal and is widely used as a quality of care parameter. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has affected many health-care systems, including HT care. Therefore, the present study assessed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on TI and its predictors in patients with HT. Methods: The electronic medical records of patients with HT who attended a primary care clinic at a tertiary hospital during pre-COVID-19 (February 2019 to February 2020) and COVID-19 (March to August 2020) periods were reviewed. Results: Our study included 6089 visits during the 12-month pre-COVID-19 period and 2852 visits during the 6-month COVID-19 period. Most of the baseline characteristics of the HT patients were not significantly different between the two time periods. During the COVID-19 period, the percentage of uncontrolled HT visits decreased from 43% to 31%. Similarly, the prevalence of TI decreased from 81% to 77%. False TI was predominantly due to physicians’ concerns regarding the in-clinic blood pressure measurement being inaccurate during both the periods. Conclusion: After readjustment for the physicians ‘reasons, the true TI was 64% and 60% in the pre-COVID-19 and COVID-19 period. For adjusted physician and patient-related factors, multilevel modeling was used. Senior medical staff visits, elderly patients, prior diabetes mellitus diagnosis, patients who used more than one type of anti-HT medication, and patients with systolic blood pressure >150 mmHg were all predictors of TI. The COVID-19 period, on the other hand had no effect on TI with an adjusted odds ratio of 0.82 (95% confidence interval, 0.67–1.01).

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

COVID-19HypertensionMultilevel modelingPrimary careQuality of careTherapeutic inertia

ASJC Subject Area

Medicine : Public Health, Environmental and Occupational HealthMedicine : Health Policy

Funding Agency

Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University


Bibliography


Sornsenee, P., Vichitkunakorn, P., Choomalee, K., & Romyasamit, C. (2021). Effect of the covid-19 pandemic and other predictors of true therapeutic inertia on patients with hypertension in a primary care clinic in thailand. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, 143807-3816. doi:10.2147/RMHP.S327644

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