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USPSTF urges extra step before treating hypertension

The Journal of Family Practice. 2016 January;65(1):41-42,44
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Use ambulatory or at-home blood pressure measuring to confirm high readings found in the office. Vary screening intervals according to patient age and risk factors.

 

Remaining questions

The new USPSTF recommendation leaves several issues unaddressed. For one thing, the Affordable Care Act mandates that commercial health insurance plans provide services with an A or B Task Force recommendation to patients with no copayments. So does the new HBP recommendation mean payers have to make ABPM and HBPM available to patients at no charge?

Up to 30% of individuals diagnosed with high BP in a clinical setting will have BP in the normal range when measurements are taken outside of the doctor's office.

There are other questions, too. If HBP detected by OMBP is not confirmed when ABPM is performed, should ABPM be repeated, and if so, at what interval? What is the role of emerging technologies that use devices other than arm cuffs to measure blood pressure?

Despite these uncertainties, the new USPSTF and CPSTF recommendations refine the longstanding in-office–only approach to diagnosing and monitoring HBP and advocate newer technologies that could help improve diagnostic accuracy, avoid over-diagnosis and over-treatment, and improve patient adherence to treatment goals.