Abstracts
Abstract
Background: Hypertension affects nearly 50% of adult Americans and can lead to serious cardiovascular complications, including myocardial infarction, stroke, and death. The Centers for Disease Control [CDC] (n.d.) noted that hypertension costs $131 billion a year in healthcare visits, medications to treat high blood pressure, and loss of productivity due to premature death.
Methods: The project consisted of four Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles that implemented two core interventions, with tests of change for each cycle driven by study of the data.
Results: Repeating blood pressure measurements improved from 14% to 69% over eight weeks, with a z-score calculated regarding the aim with a pre- and post-implementation p < 0.0001. Hypertension screening was used with 84% of eligible participants, and patient engagement was used with 39%.
Conclusions: This project improved hypertension screening and increased patient engagement. The interventions can be easily implemented in similar settings.
Keywords:
- Hypertension,
- Quality Improvement,
- Screening,
- Shared Decision
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Appendices
Biographical notes
Dr. Alexandra Peters (DNP, APRN, FNP-C) is a family nurse practitioner dedicated to advancing quality improvement in rural health care and specializes in enhancing care delivery for underserved populations in New England. She combines evidence-based practice with innovative strategies to improve patient outcomes, ensuring accessible, high-quality care for individuals and families in remote communities. Alexandra.Peters01@frontier.edu
Dr. Ann Schaeffer (DNP, CNM, CNE) is an associate professor in the Doctor of Nursing Practice program at Frontier Nursing University, where she focuses on teaching quality improvement in health care. Ann’s practice specialties are midwifery and mental health; she is a certified nurse educator and a fellow of the American College of Nurse-Midwives. Email Ann.Schaeffer@frontier.edu