Statement of remit: To align with its mission to reduce the global burden of raised blood pressure (BP), the International Society of Hypertension (ISH) has developed worldwide practice guidelines for the management of hypertension in adults, aged 18 years and older. The ISH Guidelines Committee extracted evidence-based content presented in recently published extensively reviewed guidelines and tailored ESSENTIAL and OPTIMAL standards of care in a practical format that is easy-to-use particularly not only in low-resource settings but also in high-resource settings- by clinicians, but also nurses and community health workers, as appropriate. Although distinction between low-resource and high-resource settings often refers to high (HIC) and low-income and middle-income countries (LMIC), it is well established that in HIC, there are areas with low-resource settings, and vice versa. Herein optimal care refers to evidence-based standard-of-care articulated in recent guidelines [1,2] and summarized here, whereas essential standards recognize that optimal standards would not always be possible. Hence, essential standards refer to minimum standards of care. To allow specification of essential standards of care for low-resource settings, the Committee was often confronted with the limitation or absence in clinical evidence, and thus applied expert opinion. In the Guidelines, differentiation between optimal and essential standards were not always possible, and were made in sections where it was most practical and sensible. The Guidelines Committee is also aware that some recommended essential standards may not be feasible in low-resource settings, for example, out-of-office BP measurements, the requirement of multiple visits for the diagnosis of hypertension, or advising the use of single pill combination therapy. Although challenging to implement, these guidelines may aid in local initiatives to motivate policy changes and serve as an instrument to drive local improvements in standards of care. Every effort should be made to achieve essential standards of care to reduce hypertension-induced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.

2020 International Society of Hypertension Global Hypertension Practice Guidelines / Thomas Unger , Claudio Borghi , Fadi Charchar , Nadia A Khan , Neil R Poulter , Dorairaj Prabhakaran , Agustin Ramirez , Markus Schlaich , George S Stergiou , Maciej Tomaszewsk , Richard D Wainford , Bryan Williams , Aletta E Schutte. - In: JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION. - ISSN 0263-6352. - STAMPA. - 38:6(2020), pp. 982-1004. [10.1097/HJH.0000000000002453]

2020 International Society of Hypertension Global Hypertension Practice Guidelines

Claudio Borghi;
2020

Abstract

Statement of remit: To align with its mission to reduce the global burden of raised blood pressure (BP), the International Society of Hypertension (ISH) has developed worldwide practice guidelines for the management of hypertension in adults, aged 18 years and older. The ISH Guidelines Committee extracted evidence-based content presented in recently published extensively reviewed guidelines and tailored ESSENTIAL and OPTIMAL standards of care in a practical format that is easy-to-use particularly not only in low-resource settings but also in high-resource settings- by clinicians, but also nurses and community health workers, as appropriate. Although distinction between low-resource and high-resource settings often refers to high (HIC) and low-income and middle-income countries (LMIC), it is well established that in HIC, there are areas with low-resource settings, and vice versa. Herein optimal care refers to evidence-based standard-of-care articulated in recent guidelines [1,2] and summarized here, whereas essential standards recognize that optimal standards would not always be possible. Hence, essential standards refer to minimum standards of care. To allow specification of essential standards of care for low-resource settings, the Committee was often confronted with the limitation or absence in clinical evidence, and thus applied expert opinion. In the Guidelines, differentiation between optimal and essential standards were not always possible, and were made in sections where it was most practical and sensible. The Guidelines Committee is also aware that some recommended essential standards may not be feasible in low-resource settings, for example, out-of-office BP measurements, the requirement of multiple visits for the diagnosis of hypertension, or advising the use of single pill combination therapy. Although challenging to implement, these guidelines may aid in local initiatives to motivate policy changes and serve as an instrument to drive local improvements in standards of care. Every effort should be made to achieve essential standards of care to reduce hypertension-induced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
2020
2020 International Society of Hypertension Global Hypertension Practice Guidelines / Thomas Unger , Claudio Borghi , Fadi Charchar , Nadia A Khan , Neil R Poulter , Dorairaj Prabhakaran , Agustin Ramirez , Markus Schlaich , George S Stergiou , Maciej Tomaszewsk , Richard D Wainford , Bryan Williams , Aletta E Schutte. - In: JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION. - ISSN 0263-6352. - STAMPA. - 38:6(2020), pp. 982-1004. [10.1097/HJH.0000000000002453]
Thomas Unger , Claudio Borghi , Fadi Charchar , Nadia A Khan , Neil R Poulter , Dorairaj Prabhakaran , Agustin Ramirez , Markus Schlaich , George S Stergiou , Maciej Tomaszewsk , Richard D Wainford , Bryan Williams , Aletta E Schutte
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/762683
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