AI Article Synopsis

  • The global rise in hypertension is concerning, and many patients are not receiving adequate treatment to reach their blood pressure goals.
  • An international Working Group recommends that tackling this issue requires collaboration among patients, healthcare professionals, governments, and other stakeholders.
  • Five core actions to improve hypertension management include prevention and detection, assessing cardiovascular risk, partnering with patients, treating to goal, and fostering supportive environments, tailored to local contexts.

Article Abstract

The prevalence of hypertension continues to rise across the world, and most patients who receive medical intervention are not adequately treated to goal. A Working Group including representatives of nine international health-care organizations was convened to review the barriers to more effective blood pressure control and propose actions to address them. The group concluded that tackling the global challenge of hypertension will require partnerships among multiple constituencies, including patients, health-care professionals, industry, media, health-care educators, health planners and governments. Additionally, health-care professionals will need to act locally with renewed impetus to improve blood pressure goal rates. The Working Group identified five core actions, which should be rigorously implemented by practitioners and targeted by health systems throughout the world: (1) detect and prevent high blood pressure; (2) assess total cardiovascular risk; (3) form an active partnership with the patient; (4) treat hypertension to goal and (5) create a supportive environment. These actions should be pursued with vigour in accordance with current clinical guidelines, with the details of implementation adapted to the economic and cultural setting.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.jhh.1002284DOI Listing

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