Development of quality indicators for hypertension, extractable from the electronic health record of the general practitioner. A rand-modified Delphi method.

Author:

Danhieux Katrien1,Hollevoet Marieke2,Lismont Sien2,Taveirne Pieter2,Vaerenbergh Lotte Van2,Vaes Bert2,Bulck Steve Van den3

Affiliation:

1. University of Antwerp

2. KU Leuven

3. Department of Public Health and Primary Care, KU Leuven, Leuven ,Belgium; Research Group Healthcare and Ethics, UHasselt, Hasselt, Belgium.

Abstract

Abstract

Background: Hypertension, a chronic medical condition affecting millions of people worldwide, is a leading cause of cardiovascular diseases. A multidisciplinary approach is needed to reduce the burden of the disease, with general practitioners playing a vital role. Therefore, it is crucial that GPs provide high-quality care that is standardized and based on the most recent (inter)national guidelines. Quality indicators (QIs) can be used to assess the performance, outcomes, or processes of healthcare delivery and are critical in helping healthcare professionals identify areas of improvement and measure progress towards achieving desired health outcomes. However, QIs to evaluate the care of patients with hypertension in general practice have been studied to a limited extent. The aim of our study is to define quality indicators for hypertension in general practice that are extractable from the electronic health record (EHR) and can be used to evaluate and improve the quality of care for hypertensive patients in the general practice setting. Methods: We used a Rand-modified Delphi procedure. We extracted recommendations from (inter)national guidelines and assembled them into an online questionnaire. An initial scoring based on the SMART principle and extractability from the EHR was performed by panel members, these results were analyzed using a Median Likert score, prioritization and degree of consensus. A consensus meeting was set up in which all the recommendations were discussed, followed by a final validation round. Results: Our study extracted 115 recommendations from (inter)national guidelines on hypertension and was converted into an online questionnaire. After analysis of the questionnaire round and a consensus meeting round, 37 recommendations were accepted and 75 were excluded. Of these 37 recommendations, 9 were slightly modified and 4 were combined into 2 recommendations, resulting in a list of 35 recommendations. All recommendations of the final set were translated to QIs, made up of 7 QIs on screening, 6 QIs on diagnosis, 11 QIs on treatment, 5 QIs on outcome and 6 QIs on follow-up. Conclusions: Our study resulted in a set of 35 QIs for hypertension in general practice. The QIs are extractable from the EHR making them suitable for automated quality assessment.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference36 articles.

1. WHO Fact sheet on Hypertension. Last updated 16th March 2023 World Health Organization. Available from: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/hypertension.

2. Poulter NR, Prabhakaran D, Caulfield M, Hypertension. Lancet. 2015;386(9995):801–12.

3. Van der Heyden J, Nguyen D, Renard F et al. Belgian Health Examination Survey. Sciensano, 2018; 33–34.

4. Lecture MCH. Leuven, Arteriële hypertensie: de huidige richtlijnen, zin en onzin;2021.

5. Hypertensive patients in a general practice setting: comparative analysis between controlled and uncontrolled hypertension;Santiago LM;Rev Port Cardiol,2014

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