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Original Article

Family Physicians’ Quality Interventions and Performance Improvement for Hypertension through Maintenance of Certification

Lars E. Peterson

Corresponding Author

Lars E. Peterson

For more information on this article, contact Lars E. Peterson at lpeterson@theabfm.org.Search for more papers by this author
Brenna BlackburnJames C. PufferRobert L. Phillips Jr
First published: 07 August 2014

Abstract

Purpose

Hypertension is a cause of considerable morbidity and mortality. Our objective was to describe the quality outcomes associated with physicians’ completion of hypertension Performance in Practice Modules (PPMs) as part of Maintenance of Certification (MOC).

Methods

Descriptive study of all hypertension PPMs completed by family physicians from July 2006 to 2013. Descriptive statistics characterized physician demographics and quality outcomes; linear regression determined characteristics associated with improvement.

Results

In total, 7,319 hypertension PPMs were completed by family physicians that had a mean age of 47.9 years and 14.2 years of practice experience. Most (52.4%) chose lipid control as their quality improvement (QI) focus. Performance on all quality measures improved except mean low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol values; however, percentage of patients with LDL < 130 mg/dl improved. Improvement was seen in blood pressure control (87.4% to 92.6%, p < .05), low sodium diet counseling (74.1% to 92.7%, p < .05), and exercise counseling (82.4% to 94.4%, p < .05). In regression models, no variable was consistently associated with improvement.

Discussion

Family physicians improved the quality of care for patients with hypertension through MOC. Leveraging MOC across all specialties may become an important support for improving management of conditions that cause considerable morbidity and mortality.

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