1. Blood pressure control in Türkiye: A primary healthcare pilot study
- Author
-
Banu Ekinci, Saion Chatterjee, Ilayda Ucuncu, Zubeyde Ozkan Altunay, Tufan Nayir, Secil Sis, Esin Yilmaz Aslan, Nevin Cobanoglu, Gulay Sarıoglu, Fatma Tamkoc Gurbuzturk, Sila Toker, Secil Ozkan, and Toker Erguder
- Subjects
Hypertension ,Primary health care (PHC) ,Quality improvement ,Capacity building ,NCD management model ,Medicine - Abstract
Hypertension is present in almost a third of Türkiye’s adult population. The Ministry of Health of the Republic of Türkiye in conjunction with the World Health Organization, rolled out a pilot primary health care model from February 2019 to 2020 to improve hypertension screening, management, and follow-up across the provinces of Erzincan, Çankırı and Uşak. The model was conducted in selected family health centers for one year and included multiple interventions – training of multidisciplinary primary care teams, implementation of evidence-based, standardised clinical guidelines related to monitoring and treatment of hypertension, clinical supervision and performance monitoring, and provision of health education to hypertensive individuals. Repeat surveys of population-based random samples of 975 patients were taken before (December 2018) and after (February 2020) model implementation to evaluate its effect on care delivery. There was an almost 6.5-fold increase in the measurement and subsequent recording of blood pressure compared to before model implementation (from 50 to 323). Blood pressure control improved to 58 % of measured individuals compared to 46 % of those measured at initial evaluation. The frequency of measuring risk factors and outcomes related to hypertension at least once a year increased for creatinine from 71 % to 79 %, fasting blood glucose from 70 % to 78 %, and tobacco use from 22 % to 31 %. Prescription of antihypertensive drugs increased from 49 % to 61 %. With improvements in hypertension-related care in all measures and across all regions, this primary healthcare model represents a potential paradigm for nationwide implementation.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF