BP Connect: Improving Blood Pressure Follow-Up

Lead Investigator

Resources

For more information, please contact Dr. Christie Bartels at cb4@medicine.wisc.edu

Toolkit

Areas of Impact

Overview

To prevent heart disease and stroke in high-risk patients, we have improved follow-up of high blood pressure in specialty care settings, doubling the odds of patients receiving timely primary care follow-up for high blood pressures and reducing the time to follow-up by nearly half. The BP Connect protocol is being implemented in both primary care and specialty care clinics in multiple Wisconsin health systems including Gundersen Health System, UW Health, and a current grant to implement at Froedtert & Medical College of Wisconsin.

The Clinical Problem

“There is nothing that will save more lives than controlling blood pressure.” — Former CDC Director

High blood pressures are the most prevalent and reversible cardiovascular disease risk factors among adults with chronic conditions, who are often vulnerable to gaps between specialty and primary care. Increasing preventive services to address hypertension could prevent more early deaths than any other preventive service, such as lipid treatment, cancer screening, and pneumococcal or influenza vaccination.

It is rare that high blood pressure is addressed in specialty visits. For example, in rheumatology visits even when a blood pressure of ≥160/100 was taken,

  • blood pressure was not discussed/documented in two-thirds of the visits, and
  • only 1 in 10 received any advice to follow-up for high blood pressure.

This may be due, in part, to the perception that specialists do not consider blood pressure care to be within the purview of their practice. Specialty clinic visits equal primary care visits in the United States, and specialty physicians outnumber primary care physicians. As such, specialty clinics have the opportunity to improve cardiovascular care for patients most at risk.

Our Response

The BP Connect Protocol

To address these issues, the BP Connect staff protocol was created from an evidence-based primary care hypertension staff protocol, which was adapted for use in specialty clinics.

BP Connect is designed to connect patients with high blood pressure in a specialty visit back to primary care for timely follow-up.

It is a staff protocol performed by medical assistants or nurses during vitals assessment using a series of electronic health record (EHR) alerts prompting staff to Check to re-measure high blood pressures, Advise with brief counseling, and Connect using a simple clickable follow-up order.

The short video below demonstrates the protocol.

Development of the Protocol

BEFORE: “There is no system. I don’t ever know what happens.”

AFTER: “You just have so many high ones… it would just be, ‘Oh, it’s always like that.’ Once you get used to doing [the protocol], it’s actually easier.” Rheumatology MA

The BP Connect staff protocol was developed at three rheumatology clinics at a large academic health system.

Dr. Bartels and her team used a participatory work system redesign to develop the protocol, and held focus group sessions with medical assistants (MAs) and nurses to (a) assess current processes and needs, and (b) develop a proposed EHR-supported blood pressure alert and referral process.

Results

Dr. Bartels et al. conducted a study on the effectiveness of the BP Connect protocol (Bartels et al. Arthritis Care Res 2019) and found that after implementing the protocol, the odds of patients receiving timely primary care follow-up for high blood pressures doubled, and the median time to follow-up declined by nearly half, dropping from 71 to 38 days.

Additionally, rheumatology visits with high blood pressures recorded declined from 17% to 8% over a 2-year period, which suggests that the protocol helped reduce high blood pressures in this

Rheumatology visits with high blood pressures

Before BP Connect
17
After BP Connect
8

Lasting Impact

A toolkit that contains the BP Connect protocol, and a variety of resources to enable organizations to implement it effectively, is available for free on HIPxChange. The toolkit can be used by health care administrators, clinicians, and/or researchers who seek to improve follow-up care when high blood pressure is identified in specialty clinics. One community practice successfully used the toolkit to re-create the BP Connect protocol EHR tools in a day.

The BP Connect protocol is being implemented in both primary care and specialty care clinics in multiple Wisconsin health systems, including Gundersen Health System, Froedtert & Medical College of Wisconsin, and UW Health, with interest from the University of Vermont Larner College of Medicine. Two-year follow-up indicated population level improvements across 28,285 post-implementation visits at UW Health.

While the original implementation of BP Connect was in rheumatology clinics, the protocol has also been used in other specialty clinics. In 2021, the protocol was extended to two UW Health gynecology sub-specialty clinics. The intervention has particular relevance for specialties associated with high cardiovascular disease risk (e.g., status post-cancer, HIV care, etc.) where high blood pressures are not addressed routinely (e.g., non-cardiovascular specialty clinics).

In addition to the BP Connect intervention, Dr. Bartels has developed other protocols to improve the health of patients in specialty care. Quit Connect is a protocol for specialty clinics to improve referrals to state tobacco quit lines, and materials to implement the protocol are also available for free on HIPxChange. Fit Connect is another early program that uses an electronic health record referral system to connect arthritis patients to an evidence-based arthritis activity program.

References

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