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More Than 400 Medical Practices Join National Call to Prioritize Blood Pressure Control


Just one year after the American Heart Association (AHA) and American Medical Association (AMA) launched Target: BP, more than 400 medical practices, providers, and health systems are now participating in the joint national initiative aimed at reducing the number of American adults who die from heart attacks and strokes every year.

One in three American adults—approximately 80 million people—has high blood pressure, and that number is steadily climbing, despite the fact that high blood pressure can be treated easily using evidence-based guidelines. There is a substantial body of evidence showing that high blood pressure is a contributing factor to many major health conditions, including heart attack, heart failure, stroke, kidney failure, and other disease consequences.

Collectively these Target: BP participants will work together with the AHA and AMA to significantly improve the nation's current national blood pressure control rate of 54%.

"Improving blood pressure control rates will save many more lives," says AMA President Andrew W. Gurman, MD. "Even a 10% increase in the number of people successfully treated for hypertension would lead to the prevention of an additional 14,000 deaths each year. That is exactly why we launched our Target: BP initiative, to improve health outcomes and save thousands of lives."

Specifically, participants will work to achieve high levels of control using the latest AHA guidelines on high blood pressure, aiming for readings of lower than 140/90 mm Hg for each patient—with goals adjusted as new data drives future guideline revisions. The AHA and AMA will provide participants with tools and resources, including the AHA/ACC/CDC Hypertension Treatment Algorithm, to help achieve their goals. Beginning in 2017, AHA and AMA will also recognize those who attain high levels of blood pressure control as part of the Target: BP Recognition Program.

Although Target: BP is the first major collaborative initiative between the AHA and AMA, both organizations have established practice-based and community-based initiatives and online tools that are already helping physicians and patients improve blood pressure control. This joint initiative will further enhance high blood pressure awareness, understanding, and management.  

"Currently, only about half of those with high blood pressure are achieving our recommended blood pressure reading of below 140/90 mm Hg," says AHA President Steven Houser, PhD, senior associate dean of research at Temple University in Philadelphia. "With Target: BP, we hope to streamline information, resources, and tools for providers and patients, to help keep blood pressure under control. By controlling blood pressure, we can potentially prevent progression to other serious threats to heart and brain health."

While fewer Americans are dying from heart disease and stroke, the death rate caused by high blood pressure is on the rise, increasing 13% between 2001 and 2011. High blood pressure is also associated with significant economic impact, costing the US economy an estimated $46 billion annually in health care services, medications, and missed days of work

Health leaders across the country have noted that improving blood pressure control will take a concerted, focused, and ongoing effort by many. Target: BP complements and expands on existing work, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Million Hearts initiative aimed at preventing one million heart attacks and strokes by 2017.

To learn more about Target: BP and join this innovative movement to save lives, visit http://targetbp.org.

Source: American Medical Association