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Hypertension (HT) is an important risk factor for stroke, coronary heart disease (CHD), heart failure and renal diseases, and the leading risk factor of global disease burden. A multitude of interventions have proven efficacy in lowering blood pressure and reducing long term HT complications, including pharmacologic treatment, DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension), exercise, weight reduction, smoking cessation, alcohol moderation and self-monitoring of blood pressure.
Objectives:
To evaluate long-term effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of Risk-Assessment-and-Management-Programme-for-Hypertension (RAMP-HT), a multi-disciplinary structured service to enhance quality of hypertension care in primary care compared to usual care
Hypotheses:
Design and Subjects:
Retrospective study of 5-year longitudinal data on matched cohorts of public primary care patients with uncontrolled HT under RAMP-HT and usual care will be conducted to evaluate long-term effectiveness and direct medical costs. Results from the long-term effectiveness and costing analyses will be applied to Markov modeling to determine the life time cost-effectiveness of RAMP-HT.
Main outcome measures:
Data analysis:
Cox regression will be performed to estimate the effect of RAMP-HT on the development of HT complication adjusted for baseline covariates. Descriptive statistics will be used to calculate costs of RAMP-HT and annual direct medical costs for HT patients. Markov modeling will be used to simulate 2 patient cohorts (RAMP-HT versus usual care) to estimate the respective lifetime direct medical costs and QALY gained/person. Cost/QALY of RAMP-HT will be compared to that of usual care to determine the ICER.
Expected results:
The results can provide evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of RAMP-HT for primary care patients with uncontrolled HT, which can inform health policy and service planning.
Full description
Aim and objectives:
The aim of this study is to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the RAMP-HT of the HA in primary care patients with uncontrolled hypertension.
The objectives are to:
Hypotheses:
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Patients who had a diagnosis of any HT complications defined by relevant ICPC-2 and/or ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes on or before baseline*
Patients diagnosed to have Diabetes Mellitus (DM) on or before 31 March 2017, defined by ICPC-2 codes of T89 or T90
Patients exclusively managed by Specialist Out-Patient Clinic (SOPC) on or before baseline*
158,322 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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