4.3 Article

Recommended standards for assessing blood pressure in human research where blood pressure or hypertension is a major focus

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 108-113

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jch.12948

Keywords

blood pressure; blood pressure measurement; epidemiology; hypertension; research; research standards

Funding

  1. Heart and Stroke Foundation (Canada)-Canadian Institute for Health Research Chair in Hypertension Prevention and Control
  2. World Hypertension League

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Although inaccurate, nonreproducible blood pressure values can result from nonstandardized assessments, recommended approaches to standardize blood pressure measurement are often not followed in research studies. An expert consensus of national and international health and scientific organizations developed recommended minimum standards for assessing blood pressure in research subjects where: (1) blood pressure or hypertension is a major end point, or (2) blood pressure is likely a major mediator of the research outcome. Minimum research standards are presented for training of observers, technical aspects of assessing blood pressure, and equipment for both adults and children. The standards are based on prior recommendations, some of which did not conform to current evidence based-methods. All new research should require adherence to these minimum standards in the patient populations described above. Readers need to use caution in interpreting studies if the standards are not met in the defined populations.

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