Promoters of therapeutic inertia in managing hypertension: a consensus-based study.

Am J Manag Care

Department of Physiology, Pharmacology, and Toxicology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, New Campus, An-Najah National University, PO Box 7, Building 19, Office 1340, Nablus, Palestine. Email:

Published: November 2021

Objectives: Hypertension is among the most commonly managed diseases in general practice. Therapeutic inertia could be responsible for the vast majority of cardiovascular events in patients with hypertension. The present study was conducted to explore views and opinions of clinicians involved in providing health care services to patients with hypertension in Palestine and achieve formal consensus on promoters of the phenomenon of therapeutic inertia from their point of view.

Study Design: In this exploratory study, a mixed-methods approach combining literature search, qualitative interviews, and 2 Delphi technique rounds was used.

Methods: Interviews with key contact clinicians (n = 18) were conducted. To achieve formal consensus on promoters of therapeutic inertia in hypertension, 2 Delphi rounds were conducted using a panel of general practitioners, family medicine specialists, and internal medicine specialists (n = 50).

Results: The majority of the panel members (90%) agreed that therapeutic inertia was prevalent in treating patients with hypertension in Palestine. Of the 41 potential promoters, consensus was achieved on 37 (90.2%). Of these 37 promoters, 21 (56.8%) were clinician-related, 10 (27.0%) were patient-related, and 6 (16.2%) were health care system-related factors. The study explored views and opinions of clinicians involved in providing health care services to patients with hypertension in Palestine relevant to therapeutic inertia in hypertension.

Conclusions: Findings of this study could inform policy and decision makers to devise strategies to eliminate or reduce therapeutic inertia in managing hypertension in Palestinian clinical practice. Future studies are needed to determine whether such strategies can improve outcomes of patients with hypertension.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.37765/ajmc.2021.88775DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

therapeutic inertia
28
patients hypertension
20
health care
12
hypertension palestine
12
hypertension
9
promoters therapeutic
8
inertia managing
8
managing hypertension
8
views opinions
8
opinions clinicians
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!