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Impact of COVID-19 on recorded blood pressure screening and hypertension management in England
We describe the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on blood pressure screening and hypertension management in England.
Abstract
Background
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted cardiovascular disease management in primary care in England.
Objective
To describe the impact of the pandemic on blood pressure screening and hypertension management based on a national quality of care scheme (Quality and Outcomes Framework, QOF) across key demographic, regional and clinical subgroups.
Methods
With NHS England approval, a population-based cohort study was conducted using OpenSAFELY-TPP on 25.2 million NHS patients registered at general practices (March 2019 to March 2023). We examined monthly changes in recorded blood pressure screening in the preceding 5 years in patients aged ≥45 years and recorded the hypertension prevalence and the percentage of patients treated to target (≤140/90 mmHg for patients aged ≤79 years and ≤150/90 mmHg for patients aged ≥80 years) in the preceding 12 months.
Results
The percentage of patients aged ≥45 years who had blood pressure screening recorded in the preceding 5 years decreased from 90% (March 2019) to 85% (March 2023). Recorded hypertension prevalence was relatively stable at 15% throughout the study period. The percentage of patients with a record of hypertension treated to target in the preceding 12 months reduced from a maximum of 71% (March 2020) to a minimum of 47% (February 2021) in patients aged ≤79 years and from 85% (March 2020) to a minimum of 58% (February 2021) in patients aged ≥80 years before recovery. Blood pressure screening rates in the preceding 5 years remained stable in older people, patients with recorded learning disability or care home status.
Conclusion
The pandemic substantially disrupted hypertension management QOF indicators, which is likely attributable to general reductions of blood pressure measurement including screening. OpenSAFELY can be used to continuously monitor changes in national quality-of-care schemes to identify changes in key clinical subgroups early and support prioritisation of recovery from care disrupted by COVID-19.
- Milan Wiedemann,
- Vicky Speed,
- Christine Cunningham,
- Rose Higgins,
- Helen Curtis,
- Colm Andrews,
- Louis Fisher,
- Lisa Hopcroft,
- Christopher Rentsch,
- Viyaasan Mahalingasivam,
- Laurie Tomlinson,
- Caroline Morton,
- Miriam Samuel,
- Millie Green,
- Chris Wood,
- Andrew Brown,
- Jon Massey,
- Caroline Walters,
- Becky Smith,
- Peter Inglesby,
- Dave Evans,
- Steve Maude,
- Iain Dillingham,
- Alex Walker,
- Jess Morley,
- Amir Mehrkar,
- Seb Bacon,
- Christopher Bates,
- Jonathan Cockburn,
- John Parry,
- Frank Hester,
- Sam Harper,
- Richard McManus,
- Ben Goldacre,
- Brian MacKenna