Blood pressure telemonitoring and telemedicine for hypertension management-positions, expectations and feasibility of Latin-American practitioners. SURVEY carried out by several cardiology and hypertension societies of the Americas.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Blood Pressure Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1080/08037051.2022.2123781
Daniel Piskorz, Luis Alcocer Díaz-Barreiro, Ricardo López Santi, Ana Múnera, Dora Inés Molina, Weimar Sebba Barroso, Fernando Wyss, Carlos Ponte Negretti, Héctor Galván Oseguera, Silvia Palomo, Enrique Díaz-Díaz, Martín Rosas Peralta, Adolfo Chávez Mendoza, Humberto Alvarez Lopez, Sebastián García Zamora, Ernesto Peñaherrera Patiño, Arturo Guerra López, Adriana Puente Barragan
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the opinion of Latin-American physicians on remote blood pressure monitoring and telehealth for hypertension management.

Material and methods: Cross-sectional survey of physicians residing in Latin-America. The study was conducted by the Mexico Hypertension Experts Group, Interamerican Society of Hypertension, Interamerican Society of Cardiology Epidemiology and Cardiovascular Prevention Council, and National Cardiologist Association of Mexico. An online survey composed of 40 questions using Google Forms was distributed from 7 December 2021, to 3 February 2022. The survey was approved by the GREHTA Ethics Committee and participation was voluntary and anonymous. Multiple logistic regression models were constructed to identify the challenges of telehealth.

Results: 1753 physicians' responses were gathered. The responses came from physicians from different Latin-American countries, as follows: 24% from Mexico, 20.6% from Argentina, 14.7% from Colombia, 10.9% from Brazil, 8.7% from Venezuela, 8.2% from Guatemala and 3.2% from Paraguay. Responders with a high interest in carrying out their assistance task through remote telemonitoring reached 48.9% (821), while 43.6% are already currently conducting telemonitoring. A high number, 62%, claimed to need telemonitoring training. There is a direct relation between higher interest in telemonitoring and age, medical specialty, team working, residence in the biggest cities, expectations regarding telemedicine and reimbursement.

Conclusions: Remote monitoring is feasible in Latin-America. General practitioners and specialists from bigger cities seem eager and are self-perceived as well-trained and experienced. Facilities and resources do not seem to be a challenge but training reinforcement and telemedicine promotion is necessary for those physicians less motivated.PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARYWhat is the context?Hypertension is one of the leading worldwide modifiable risk factors for premature death. Strong evidence supports that effective treatment of this condition results in a significant reduction of hard outcomes.Only 20%-30% of hypertensive patients are within the blood pressure targets recommended by guidelines in Latin-America. There is an urgent need to implement innovative strategies to reverse this alarming health situation.What is new?Latin-American physicians were highly predisposed to telemonitoring practice. This high motivation was not influenced by hardware or software availability, technological knowledge or experience, by volume of monthly consultations, or by area (private-public) where the care activity is carried out.This high motivation may be supported by the conviction that this practice could be very useful as a complement to face-to-face assistance and a highly effective tool to improve adherence even though respondents considered that just 10% of the patients would prefer telemonitoring over office consultation.What is the impact?Facilities and resources do not seem to be a challenge but training reinforcement and telemedicine promotion is necessary for those physicians less motivated. The general perception is that it is necessary to move forward to resolve legal gaps and financial aspects.Physicians must adapt to changes and develop new communication strategies in a world where the unrestricted access to teleinformation makes patients self-perceived as experts.

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血压远程监测和远程医疗在高血压管理中的地位、期望和可行性。由美洲几个心脏病学和高血压学会进行的调查。
目的:评估拉丁美洲医生对远程血压监测和远程健康管理高血压的看法。材料和方法:对居住在拉丁美洲的医生进行横断面调查。这项研究是由墨西哥高血压专家组、美洲高血压学会、美洲心脏病流行病学学会和心血管预防委员会以及墨西哥国家心脏病专家协会进行的。从2021年12月7日到2022年2月3日,使用谷歌表格进行了一项由40个问题组成的在线调查。该调查得到了GREHTA伦理委员会的批准,参与是自愿和匿名的。构建了多个逻辑回归模型来识别远程医疗面临的挑战。结果:共收集到1753名医生的反馈。这些答复来自不同拉丁美洲国家的医生,情况如下:墨西哥24%、阿根廷20.6%、哥伦比亚14.7%、巴西10.9%、委内瑞拉8.7%、危地马拉8.2%和巴拉圭3.2%。48.9%(821人)的应答者对通过远程监控执行救援任务非常感兴趣,而43.6%的应答者目前已经在进行远程监控。高达62%的人声称需要远程监控培训。对远程医疗的高兴趣与年龄、医疗专业、团队合作、居住在大城市、对远程医疗的期望和报销之间存在直接关系。结论:远程监测在拉丁美洲是可行的。来自大城市的全科医生和专家似乎很热心,他们自认为训练有素,经验丰富。设施和资源似乎不是一个挑战,但加强培训和推广远程医疗对那些缺乏积极性的医生是必要的。通俗易懂的语言概括上下文是什么?高血压是世界范围内导致过早死亡的主要可改变危险因素之一。强有力的证据表明,对这种情况的有效治疗可显著减少不良后果。在拉丁美洲,只有20%-30%的高血压患者在指南建议的血压目标范围内。迫切需要实施创新战略,扭转这一令人震惊的健康状况。有什么新鲜事吗?拉丁美洲的医生高度倾向于远程监测实践。这种高动机不受硬件或软件可用性、技术知识或经验、每月会诊量或开展护理活动的地区(私人-公共)的影响。尽管受访者认为只有10%的患者更喜欢远程监护而不是办公室咨询,但这种做法作为面对面协助的补充和提高依从性的高效工具非常有用,这一信念可能支持了这种高动机。影响是什么?设施和资源似乎不是一个挑战,但加强培训和推广远程医疗对那些缺乏积极性的医生是必要的。普遍的看法是,有必要向前推进,以解决法律空白和财政问题。医生必须适应变化,并制定新的沟通策略,在这个世界上,不受限制地获取远程信息使患者自我认为是专家。
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来源期刊
Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure Medicine-Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
5.60%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: For outstanding coverage of the latest advances in hypertension research, turn to Blood Pressure, a primary source for authoritative and timely information on all aspects of hypertension research and management. Features include: • Physiology and pathophysiology of blood pressure regulation • Primary and secondary hypertension • Cerebrovascular and cardiovascular complications of hypertension • Detection, treatment and follow-up of hypertension • Non pharmacological and pharmacological management • Large outcome trials in hypertension.
期刊最新文献
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