Table 2.
Main Content Domain | Subcategory | Description |
---|---|---|
Clinician-related scenarios | Scenarios of non-initiation/non-intensification of antihypertensive treatment by the clinician due to issues relating to clinician intention, capability or scope. | |
Neglect | Clinician did not acknowledge nor prioritize the BP at visit | |
Diffusion of responsibility | Specialist visited did not initiate/intensify treatment, opting instead to defer responsibility to a hypertension-managing provider (i.e., PCP, cardiologist, etc.), excluding cases where an urgent referral to said provider was made. | |
Patient-related scenarios | Scenarios of non-initiation/non-intensification of antihypertensive treatment by the clinician due to patient behavioral considerations. | |
Patient non-adherence | Clinician did not intensify intervention due to patient’s non-adherence to current therapy. | |
Patient preference | Clinician did not initiate/intensify intervention due to patient preference not to. | |
Clinical complexity-related scenarios | Scenarios of non-initiation/non-intensification of antihypertensive treatment by the clinician due to clinical situational complexities. | |
Diagnostic uncertainty with BP measurement | The clinician did not initiate or intensify treatment due to variations in BP measurements, whether at home or in the office. This includes cases where high in-office readings were believed to be a result of the white coat effect, pain, or other causes of reactive elevated BP. | |
Maintenance of current BP intervention | Clinician chose to delay intensifying treatment in order to observe if current antihypertensives/lifestyle modifications would result in BP control. | |
Competing medical priorities | Clinician did not intensify treatment due to competing clinical considerations |
Abbreviation: BP: blood pressure; PCP: primary care provider.