(New York, N.Y.): A ground-breaking Canadian blood pressure education program will be a powerful tool in fight to reduce stroke around the world. This morning, Dr. Sheldon Tobe, Chair of the Canadian Hypertension Education Program (CHEP) and a long-standing Heart and Stroke Foundation researcher, unveiled a new and powerful tool in the management of hypertension at the American Society of Hypertension (ASH) Scientific Meeting —The Heart&Stroke Hypertension Management Program.
- A reduction of 5 mm Hg in systolic in blood pressure translates into:
- A 14% drop in stroke mortality
- A 9% drop in coronary heart disease and
- A 7% reduction in overall mortality
- It has been shown that effective blood pressure control can reduce the incidence of stroke by up to 40%!
“This study is showing us that in hypertension, a simple inexpensive education intervention can lead to the sustained achievement of blood pressure control for at least three years,” Dr. Tobe says. Dr. Mel Cescon of the New Vision Family Health Team in Kitchener says, “Our team was able to transfer and adapt this protocol to the diagnosis and early treatment of other chronic conditions such as diabetes.” The Canadian program will assist family physicians and healthcare providers in achieving those elusive, sustained, reductions in hypertension. Supported in large part by the Ontario government, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario collaborated with the Ontario College of Family Physicians, the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario and the Ontario Pharmacists’ Association to create the program. FINANCIAL BENEFITS In 2005, cardiovascular disease cost Canada more than $21 billion a year in healthcare and lost productivity. That number is expected to climb to more than $28 billion by 2020. The U.S. Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research has reported that Americans spent $29 billion for prescription cardiovascular drugs alone in 2008. “Getting hypertension under control is one way of greatly reducing the hemorrhage of taxpayers’ money,” said Dr. Tobe. “For patients in the Canadian and American healthcare systems, for care-givers and administrators alike, the implementation of the Heart&Stroke Hypertension Management Program will prove beneficial financially and in terms of public health. It is imperative that we get guideline-based programs like this into everyday primary care practice right across North America.” BEST EVIDENCE POINTS THE WAY The new protocol is guided by best practice principles. The Heart&Stroke Hypertension Management Program demonstrates that an evidence-informed inter-professional primary healthcare provider educational intervention can successfully integrate into the practice of primary care clinicians to improve the management and control of hypertension in their patients. A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE According to the World Health Organization, hypertension is a major cause of disability and is the leading risk factor for premature death, causing an estimated 7.5 million deaths per year globally. More than one third of the world’s population suffers from high blood pressure and cardiovascular disease. The number of baby boomers headed for the high risk years for cardiovascular disease is expected to create unique stress on healthcare systems all over the world. “These made-in-Canada results should give healthcare professionals, healthcare economists and everyone with high blood pressure cause to rejoice,” said David Sculthorpe, CEO of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario. Want to find out more about hypertension and global health? Visit: www.heartandstroke.ca BACKGROUND For healthcare providers, the support system includes:
- Hypertension Flowsheet charting tool in both paper and electronic formats, with built in prompts to guide the healthcare provider during the patient’s visit and to record the patient’s progress and care plan;
- Confidential practice reports, produced through a secure web-based data repository that enable providers to know how well their patients are doing over time and compared with other participating sites;
- Tape measures with waist circumference risk markers.
For patients, the self-management resources offered by healthcare providers include:
- An education booklet
- A log book
- Information fact sheets
- Consumer e-tools such as “My Heart&Stroke Blood Pressure Action Plan” and ”My Heart&Stroke Risk Assessment” – which provide confidential risk assessment, an opt-in program for email support and the ability to track/monitor blood pressure and progress.
Contact info: Diane Hargrave Public Relations, 416-467-9954 x104 cell 416-826-5911 dhprbks@interlog.com
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