Effect of Pharmaceutical Intervention in Pharmacologically Treated Hypertensive Patients—A Cluster-Randomized Clinical Trial: AFPRES-CLM Study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Luque del Moral, Raúl; Gastelurrutia, Miguel Ángel; Martínez Martínez, Fernando; Suarez, Blanca; Fikri-Benbrahim, NarjisEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Arterial hypertension Community pharmacy care program Outcomes health Pharmaceutical intervention Blood pressure control
Fecha
2023-10-11Referencia bibliográfica
Luque del Moral, R.; Gastelurrutia, M.A.; Martinez-Martinez, F.; Jacomé, J.A.; Dago, A.; Suarez, B.; Fikri-Benbrahim, N.; Martí, M.; Nuñez, C.; Sierra-Alarcón, S.; et al. Effect of Pharmaceutical Intervention in Pharmacologically Treated Hypertensive Patients—A Cluster-Randomized Clinical Trial: AFPRES-CLM Study. J. Pers. Med. 2023, 13, 1484. [https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13101484]
Patrocinador
General Council of Official Associations of PharmacistsResumen
Background: Evaluate the effect of a community pharmaceutical intervention on the control of blood pressure in hypertensive patients treated pharmacologically.Methods: A cluster-randomized clinical trial of 6 months was carried out. It was conducted in the Autonomous Community of Castilla-La Mancha (Spain). Sixty-three community pharmacies and 347 patients completed the study. Intervention patients received the community pharmaceutical intervention based on a protocol that addresses the individual needs of each patient related to the control of their blood pressure, which included Health Education, Pharmacotherapy Follow-up and 24 h Ambulatory Blood Pressure Measurement. Control patients received usual care in the community pharmacy.Results: The pharmaceutical intervention resulted in better control of blood pressure (85.8% vs. 66.3% p < 0.001), lower use of emergencies (p = 0.002) and improvement trends in the physical components of quality of life, measured by SF-36 questionnaire, after 6 months of pharmaceutical intervention. No significant changes were observed for any of these variables in the control group. There were also detected 354 negative medication-related outcomes that were satisfactorily resolved in a 74.9% of the cases and 330 healthcare education interventions and 29 Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitorings were performed in order to increase adherence to pharmacological treatment and minimize Negative Outcomes associated with Medication and prevent medication-related problems.Conclusions: Community pharmaceutical intervention can increase hypertensive patients with controlled blood pressure, after 6 months, compared with usual care.