New blood pressure targets are unachievable for most patients

Main Category: Hypertension
Article Date: 03 Sep 2004 - 12:00 PDT

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New blood pressure targets are low enough to be unachievable for most patients, say experts from Aberdeen University in this week's BMJ (British Medical Journal).

While plenty of strong evidence shows the benefits of lowering blood pressure, targets ? and their ceaseless revision ? are less evidence based, write Neil Campbell and Peter Murchie.

Even in clinical trials, most patients fail to achieve the newer, more stringent targets, while people older than 60 ? the bulk of patients with hypertension in general practice ? and people with diabetes are even less likely to reach this, they add.

Individual patients vary widely in their perception of acceptable risk and side effects when it comes to lowering their blood pressure yet, surprisingly, the patient's role in deciding his or her own blood pressure target receives scant attention in guidelines, they add. "If targets have a role, it is as something to be aimed for, not something that must be achieved at all costs."

Individual patients must be involved in decisions about their care, and this requires effective communication on the subject of risks, benefits, and side effects. Appropriate management of blood pressure should therefore be guided by an informed dialogue between patients and doctors and not by blind pursuit of blood pressure targets, they conclude.

Contacts:

[Wed 1 Sept]: Neil Campbell, Senior Lecturer, Department of General Practice and Primary Care, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill Health Centre, Aberdeen, Scotland
Email: n.campbell@abdn.ac.uk

[Thurs 2 Sept]: Peter Murchie, Research Training Fellow
Email: p.murchie@abdn.ac.uk

(Editorial: Treating hypertension with guidelines in general practice)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/329/7465/523

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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