Cargando…

Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework

Objective To determine levels of blood pressure monitoring and control in primary care and to determine the effect of social deprivation on these levels. Design Retrospective longitudinal survey, 2005 to 2007. Setting General practices in England. Participants Data obtained from 8515 practices (99.3...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ashworth, Mark, Medina, Jibby, Morgan, Myfanwy
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2590907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18957697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2030
_version_ 1782161363171278848
author Ashworth, Mark
Medina, Jibby
Morgan, Myfanwy
author_facet Ashworth, Mark
Medina, Jibby
Morgan, Myfanwy
author_sort Ashworth, Mark
collection PubMed
description Objective To determine levels of blood pressure monitoring and control in primary care and to determine the effect of social deprivation on these levels. Design Retrospective longitudinal survey, 2005 to 2007. Setting General practices in England. Participants Data obtained from 8515 practices (99.3% of all practices) in year 1, 8264 (98.3%) in year 2, and 8192 (97.8%) in year 3. Main outcome measures Blood pressure indicators and chronic disease prevalence estimates contained within the UK quality and outcomes framework; social deprivation scores for each practice, ethnicity data obtained from the 2001 national census; general practice characteristics. Results In 2005, 82.3% of adults (n=52.8m) had an up to date blood pressure recording; by 2007, this proportion had risen to 88.3% (n=53.2m). Initially, there was a 1.7% gap between mean blood pressure recording levels in practices located in the least deprived fifth of communities compared with the most deprived fifth, but, three years later, this gap had narrowed to 0.2%. Achievement of target blood pressure levels in 2005 for practices located in the least deprived communities ranged from 71.0% (95% CI 70.4% to 71.6%) for diabetes to 85.1% (84.7% to 85.6%) for coronary heart disease; practices in the most deprived communities achieved 68.9% (68.4% to 69.5%) and 81.8 % (81.3% to 82.3%) respectively. Three years later, target achievement in the least deprived practices had risen to 78.6% (78.1% to 79.1%) and 89.4% (89.1% to 89.7%) respectively. Target achievement in the most deprived practices rose similarly, to 79.2% (78.8% to 79.6%) and 88.4% (88.2% to 88.7%) respectively. Similar changes were observed for the achievement of blood pressure targets in hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, and chronic kidney disease. Conclusions Since the reporting of performance indicators for primary care and the incorporation of pay for performance in 2004, blood pressure monitoring and control have improved substantially. Improvements in achievement have been accompanied by the near disappearance of the achievement gap between least and most deprived areas.
format Text
id pubmed-2590907
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25909072008-12-01 Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework Ashworth, Mark Medina, Jibby Morgan, Myfanwy BMJ Research Objective To determine levels of blood pressure monitoring and control in primary care and to determine the effect of social deprivation on these levels. Design Retrospective longitudinal survey, 2005 to 2007. Setting General practices in England. Participants Data obtained from 8515 practices (99.3% of all practices) in year 1, 8264 (98.3%) in year 2, and 8192 (97.8%) in year 3. Main outcome measures Blood pressure indicators and chronic disease prevalence estimates contained within the UK quality and outcomes framework; social deprivation scores for each practice, ethnicity data obtained from the 2001 national census; general practice characteristics. Results In 2005, 82.3% of adults (n=52.8m) had an up to date blood pressure recording; by 2007, this proportion had risen to 88.3% (n=53.2m). Initially, there was a 1.7% gap between mean blood pressure recording levels in practices located in the least deprived fifth of communities compared with the most deprived fifth, but, three years later, this gap had narrowed to 0.2%. Achievement of target blood pressure levels in 2005 for practices located in the least deprived communities ranged from 71.0% (95% CI 70.4% to 71.6%) for diabetes to 85.1% (84.7% to 85.6%) for coronary heart disease; practices in the most deprived communities achieved 68.9% (68.4% to 69.5%) and 81.8 % (81.3% to 82.3%) respectively. Three years later, target achievement in the least deprived practices had risen to 78.6% (78.1% to 79.1%) and 89.4% (89.1% to 89.7%) respectively. Target achievement in the most deprived practices rose similarly, to 79.2% (78.8% to 79.6%) and 88.4% (88.2% to 88.7%) respectively. Similar changes were observed for the achievement of blood pressure targets in hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, and chronic kidney disease. Conclusions Since the reporting of performance indicators for primary care and the incorporation of pay for performance in 2004, blood pressure monitoring and control have improved substantially. Improvements in achievement have been accompanied by the near disappearance of the achievement gap between least and most deprived areas. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2008-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2590907/ /pubmed/18957697 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2030 Text en © Ashworth et al 2008 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Ashworth, Mark
Medina, Jibby
Morgan, Myfanwy
Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
title Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
title_full Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
title_fullStr Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
title_full_unstemmed Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
title_short Effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in England: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
title_sort effect of social deprivation on blood pressure monitoring and control in england: a survey of data from the quality and outcomes framework
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2590907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18957697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2030
work_keys_str_mv AT ashworthmark effectofsocialdeprivationonbloodpressuremonitoringandcontrolinenglandasurveyofdatafromthequalityandoutcomesframework
AT medinajibby effectofsocialdeprivationonbloodpressuremonitoringandcontrolinenglandasurveyofdatafromthequalityandoutcomesframework
AT morganmyfanwy effectofsocialdeprivationonbloodpressuremonitoringandcontrolinenglandasurveyofdatafromthequalityandoutcomesframework