'Hypertension'
doesn't mean 'too much tension' Published July 08, 2015.
Not
everyone understands what "hypertension" means, and as a result, some
patients may not take their blood pressure medications as directed or manage
lifestyle factors effectively. . More than half of people with high blood
pressure do not have the condition well controlled, which may in part be
because patients often believe hypertension means "too much tension,"
or too much stress. In fact, hypertension refers to high blood pressure,
which happens when the force of the blood pumping through arteries is too
strong. Chronic high blood pressure, which affects one in three U.S. adults,
can strain the heart, damage blood vessels, and increase the risk of heart
attack, stroke, kidney problems, and death, according to the National
Institutes of Health. Patients who misunderstand the term hypertension may turn
to stress management to control their high blood pressure, which they view as a
psychological condition more than as a physiological one, according to Barbara
G. Bokhour and Nancy R. Kressin of Boston University School of Public health.
These patients may focus more on stress management instead of taking
effective blood pressure medications, like diuretics, calcium-channel blockers
or ACE inhibitors. "It's always good to manage stress, that's always good
for your health writ large, but for hypertension in particular stress
management will not be enough,” Bokhour said. Lifestyle management and
taking prescribed medications are much more important for controlling blood
pressure, she said. Providers often use the term hypertension and don't always
explicitly link it to blood pressure, she said. "They are using the words
interchangeably, but patients do not always understand that they are
interchangeable," Bokhour said. She and Kressin suggest that doctors should
exclusively use the term "high blood pressure" rather than
hypertension when talking to patients. "I tend to agree with the authors'
suggestion," said Dominick Frosch of the David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA, who has also studied common beliefs about high blood pressure and
their effects on medication use. His own study found that patients who were
told about "hypertension" were more likely to think that relaxing
more would be an effective treatment, compared to patients who were told about
the same condition under the name "Korotkoff syndrome. But regardless of
label, patients still believed that evidence-based medications would be more
effective than relaxing more, Frosch noted. "A substantial proportion of
individuals who have high blood pressure inadequately control it, contributing
to avoidable cardiovascular disease risk as well as kidney disease risk.
If we want our healthcare system to be patient-centered, why would we use
ambiguous, potentially misleading language, when we can just as well avoid
it," he said. "Tradition and habit are not good justifications, in my
view. Patients may also be reluctant to take their medications regularly
because in many cases high blood pressure does not cause symptoms, so they do
not feel like they need medication, Bokhour said. Doctors should first ask
patients what they understand about high blood pressure, then have a
conversation clarifying any misunderstandings, she said. "Oftentimes
providers give information in a very rapid format, using biomedical language,"
which is true for other conditions as well, not just high blood pressure, she
said. "Hypertension is one of many, many examples where providers have an
understanding of a word and patients do not, and if we don't start to bridge
that gap we'll continue to over-treat and under-treat," she said.
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