Patients with Hypertension at Risk Due to Physician Inertia
June 21 2010 - 9:30AM
PR Newswire (US)
OSLO, June 21, 2010 /PRNewswire/ -- Data announced for
the first time at ESH suggest that patients with hypertension are
at increased cardiovascular risk due to clinician inertia, because
physicians are failing to treat targets set by accepted ESH-ESC
(European Society of Hypertension and European Society of
Cardiology) guidelines for the management of arterial hypertension
and do not act soon enough to reduce blood pressure (BP).[1]
The findings from the Supporting Hypertension Awareness and
Research Europe-wide (SHARE) survey, which sought the views of 2629
physicians from primary and secondary care across Europe, were presented at the 20th Annual
Meeting of the European Society of Hypertension (ESH), Oslo.
According to SHARE, three quarters of physicians (76%) believe
that ESH-ESC guideline BP targets of 140/90 mmHg are 'about
right'[2] and 5% say that they are 'not tight enough'.[3]
Despite this, SHARE showed that 29% of physicians, were
satisfied with systolic blood pressure being above the ESH-ESC
target of
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