Hypertensive Urgency: An Emergency Department Pipeline to Primary Care Pilot Study

Author:

Giaimo Antonio A1ORCID,Kang Angela J12,Huot Stephen J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Yale New Haven Hospital, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Waterbury Hospital, Waterbury, Connecticut, USA

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Optimal triage of patients with hypertensive urgency (HU) in the emergency department (ED) is not well established. 2017 ACC/AHA hypertension (HTN) guidelines recommend treatment initiation and follow-up within 1 week. Objectives of our pilot study were to evaluate feasibility and impact of directly connecting ED patients with HU to outpatient HTN management on blood pressure (BP) control and ED utilization. METHODS ED patients with HU and no primary care physician were scheduled by a referral coordinator for an initial appointment in a HTN clinic embedded within a primary care practice. BP control and ED utilization over the subsequent 90 days were tracked and compared with BP at time of the referral ED visit, and ED utilization in the 90 days preceding referral. RESULTS Data are reported for the first 40 referred patients. Average time to first visit was 7.8 days. Mean age was 51 years (range 28–76), 75% were African-American, and mean pooled 10-year atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk was 20.8%. Mean BP declined from 198/116 mm Hg at ED visit to 167/98 mm Hg at HTN clinic visit 1 to 136/83 by 6 weeks and was sustained at 90 days. Total ED visits for the group decreased from 61 in the 90 days prior to referral, to 18 in the 90 days after the first HTN clinic visit. CONCLUSIONS In this pilot study, coordinated referral between the ED and primary care provides safe, timely care for this high ASCVD risk population and leads to sustained reductions in BP and ED utilization.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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