Evaluation of Arterial Hypertension Care in Four Brazilian Metropoles| Stephy Publishers
Journal of Cardiology and Current Trends in Surgery | Stephy Publishers
Keywords
Hypertension, Echocardiogram, morbidity and
mortality, pharmacological therapy, therapeutic measures, Health Care
Hypertension (AH) is one of the most prevalent chronic diseases in Brazil, which, in 2018, affected about 24.5% of the adult population, reaching 59.3% of people aged 65 and over. (Ministry of Health 2020)1 These levels of prevalence and with an increasing trend have a major impact on morbidity and mortality, with high social cost. In this context, the Unified Health System (SUS) has been developing a strategic action plan based on conceptual bases that involve a comprehensive approach to chronic non-communicable diseases, especially AH, at all levels of activity (promotion, prevention and comprehensive care and organization health services for the care of patients with chronic diseases). The guidelines of the Strategic Action Plan recommend that the care offered should use, in addition to pharmacological therapy, educational actions to change lifestyle (encouraging the practice of physical activity, the consumption of healthy foods and the reduction of salt consumption), monitoring the disease by means of routine examinations and searching for damage to a target organ (ECG and Echocardiogram)2 in specific populations. In addition to this set of technically oriented resources and therapeutic measures, another aspect, fundamental to the effectiveness of the comprehensive care offered, is the bond or the ability of the Primary Health Care(PHC) team to be identified by the person living with AH as a regular source of care, as a place that it is possible to maintain the adherence; as well as the ability/qualification of the unit's staff to be recognized as a place for provide information between different services to meet that user's health needs.3,4 Thus, PHC, a gateway, must have the ability to guarantee access to the various points of care, following the rational organization of the system,5 to respond in a timely manner to a user's demand and to carry out a referral for appropriate and necessary care.6 In addition, the idea of access to ECG should include the system's organizational availability,7 or convenience,5 related to the waiting time for consultations or exams.
However, we understand that comprehensive and quality
health care depends on the deliberate organization of different health care
strategies, especially in PHC, which is considered the preferred gateway for
the system, the organizer of the Health Care Network (RAS) and care
coordinator. To evaluate AH care it was developed a cross-sectional study
applying in a multiple analytical model by triangulating exploring different
sources of information. IT was developed a comparative analysis of systemic
arterial hypertension care in four Brazilian cities, with more than one million
inhabitants. The municipalities of Campinas, Fortaleza, Porto Alegre and São
Paulo were selected for their population magnitude and because their importance
within the national health system. For the other hand, their heterogeneity
composition and organization of health services was a variable to analyze the
differences in PHC and in Specialized Care articulation. Secondary data were
extracted from the official SUS information systems and the primary data were
collected by questioning key informants from each municipality. IT was also
applied a questionnaire to patients with AH living in the municipalities, that
have been forwarded to the cardiologist by the PHC.
With some exceptions, according to the parameters of
the Ministry of Health, health care coverage indicators, between 2009 and 2014,
showed an excess supply with regard to cardiac consultation and
echocardiography for the population in the municipalities. However, it was
observed that there was no corresponding improvement in the quality of
comprehensive care for these people, indicating that hypertensive patients now
have more access to services directed to care in acute conditions. Interviews
were conducted with 2019 users of specialized care services in the four cities
under study. For the assessment of care and adherence, we used: orientation of
receiving low-salt dietary guidance for the control of AH and the continuity of
PHC follow-up after consultation with the cardiologist. The results indicate
similar trends in different regions of the country, northeast represented by
the city of Fortaleza and southeast, by Campinas. It was observed that in both
cities, the health care orientation was about 50% lower, compared to São Paulo.
The PHC adherence chance, after consultation with the cardiologist, was
approximately 2 times lower, compared to São Paulo. Regarding to the
accessibility to specialized care, approximately 60% answered that they had
waited more than 30 days to make an appointment with the cardiologist, however
with no significant differences between cities.
IT is concluded that there are obstacles in the
access and a fragile organizational flows for specialties from the PHC,
although a qualified reception promote the users adherence In Brazil. The
Unified Health System (SUS), implemented since the 1980s, allowed to reach
access expansion to health services, in particular PHC, but retained structural
fragmentation and segmentation in organization and provision of services, with
lack of financial support.
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