Evaluation and pilot implementation of essential interventions for the management of hypertension and prevention of cardiovascular diseases in primary health care in the Republic of Tajikistan

Author:

Collins Dylan,Inglin Laura,Laatikainen Tiina,Shoismatuloeva Mekhri,Sultonova Dilorom,Jonova Bunafsha,Faromuzova Katoyon,Abdullaeva Marifat,Otambekova Maisara,Farrington Jill L.

Abstract

Abstract Background The aim of this study was to determine the feasibility of implementing and evaluating essential interventions for the management of hypertension and prevention of cardiovascular disease in primary healthcare in Tajikistan. Methods The study protocol was published a priori. A pragmatic, sequential, mixed methods explanatory design was piloted. The quantitative strand is reported here. All primary health care facilities that met inclusion criteria in Shahrinav district were included and computer randomized to either usual care or intervention. The intervention consisted of: adaptation of WHO PEN/HEARTS clinical algorithms for hypertension and diabetes, a two-day training of doctors and nurses, supportive supervision visits, clinical decision support tools, and quality improvement support. Data were collected from paper-based clinical records at baseline and 12 months follow-up. The primary outcome was blood pressure control among patients with hypertension, in addition to several secondary process indicators along the care pathway. Age and sex adjusted logistic regression models were used for intervention and control clinics to determine changes between baseline and follow-up and to assess interactions between allocation group and time. For continuous variables, multivariate linear regression models were used. Results 19 primary health care centres were included of which ten were randomized to intervention and nine to control. 120 clinicians received training. The records of all registered hypertensive patients were reviewed at baseline and follow-up for a total of 1,085 patient records. Blood pressure control significantly improved in the intervention clinics (OR 3.556, 95 % CI 2.219, 5.696) but not the control clinics (OR 0.644, 95 % CI 0.370, 1.121) (p < 0.001 for interaction). Smoking assessment, statin prescribing, triple therapy prescribing, and blood pressure measurement significantly improved in intervention clinics relative to control, whereas cholesterol and glucose testing, and aspirin prescribing did not. Conclusions It is feasible to use routine, paper-based, clinical records to evaluate essential CVD interventions in primary health care in Tajikistan. Adapted WHO PEN/HEARTS guidelines in the context of a complex intervention significantly improved blood pressure control after 12 months.

Funder

World Health Organization

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Government of Russian Federation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy

Reference18 articles.

1. World Health Organization. Global Health Observatory - Total NCD Mortality by Country [Internet]. Geneva; 2018. Available from: http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.A857?lang=en.

2. World Health Organization. Risk of Premature Death from the Four Target NCDs. 2018.

3. Collins DRJ, Laatikainen T, Shoismatuloeva M, Mahmudzoha I, Rahimov Z, Sultonova D, et al. Evaluation and pilot implementation of essential interventions for the management of hypertension and prevention of cardiovascular diseases in primary health care in the Republic of Tajikistan [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]. F1000Research. 2019;8(1639).

4. WHO Regional Office for Europe. Review of the National Programme on the Development of Family Medicine 2011–2015 in Tajikistan. Copenhagen; 2016.

5. World Health Organization (WHO). Package of Essential Noncommunicable (PEN) disease interventions for primary health care in low-resource settings [Internet]. 2013. Available from: http://www.who.int/ncds/management/pen_tools/en/.

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