Steven Burgess, MD
Steven Burgess, MD, chief resident in family medicine at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, School of Medicine, Amarillo.
Here’s a disturbing bit of news: A recent study reports that 81% of blood pressure measurements taken by doctors and nurses are done improperly, resulting in numerous misdiagnoses. This means that many people are taking medications that they really don’t need!
The American Heart Association has published guidelines recommending a particular methodology to follow when taking blood pressure measurements in a clinical setting, such as a doctor’s office. In an earlier study, researchers evaluated pressure-taking techniques of 172 doctors and nurses and reported that none were following guidelines set by the American Heart Association — this inspired Steven Burgess, MD, chief resident in family medicine at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine in Amarillo, to undertake a new study to evaluate how these potentially erroneous measurements impact patient care.
What he learned is disconcerting, to say the least — he told me that the mistakes made when taking blood pressure readings were significant enough to change treatment recommendations for more than half the patients in the study! “My study showed that if someone initially has elevated blood pressure and we redo the reading in accordance with the guidelines, over 50% of the time the new ‘correct’ pressure puts the patient into a different category, which would cause treatment to be different,” he said, noting that the pressure is virtually always lower when taken “correctly.”
The most common blood pressure measurement mistake being made by health-care practitioners is to take a blood pressure reading immediately after a patient sits down. The guidelines say that patients should rest quietly for five minutes first. Why? Because physical activity raises blood pressure, often by 10 mm Hg or more.
In his 18-month study of 56 patients, Dr. Burgess found that when blood pressure is measured properly, the average patient’s systolic (top number) reading is 15.7 mm Hg lower than when the guidelines aren’t being followed. For more than half (56.4%) of the patients, using the correct technique — compared to doing it the wrong way — meant that patients were fine without medication or changes to their current therapy.
Here are the American Heart Association’s guidelines regarding the proper technique for measuring blood pressure…
Lots of people now monitor their blood pressure at home — so it’s important that everyone recognizes that these readings must be done in the proper way. Be sure you are using the right type of equipment and following instructions. Also check to see whether your equipment gives you readings that match those taken in your doctor’s office. For more information on proper equipment, technique and record-keeping for your home blood pressure monitoring, read Daily Health News, “Home Blood Pressure Monitoring May Save Your Life,” August 24, 2009.