Medication errors and blood pressure control among patients managed for hypertension in public ambulatory care clinics in Botswana

<br><strong>Background <br></strong> The prevalence of hypertension in low- and middle-income countries is rapidly increasing, with most cases undiagnosed and many poorly controlled among those diagnosed. Medication reconciliation studies from high-income countries have demon...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gala, P, Moshokgo, V, Seth, B, Ramasuana, K, Kazadi, E, M'buse, R, Pharithi, S, Gobotsamang, K, Szymanowski, P, Kerobale, RO, Balekile, K, Tshimbalanga, J, Tieng'o, J, Tapela, N, Barak, T
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
Description
Summary:<br><strong>Background <br></strong> The prevalence of hypertension in low- and middle-income countries is rapidly increasing, with most cases undiagnosed and many poorly controlled among those diagnosed. Medication reconciliation studies from high-income countries have demonstrated a high occurrence of antihypertensive medication errors and a strong association between medication errors and inadequate blood pressure control, but data from low- and middle-income countries are lacking. <br><strong>Methods and Results <br></strong> We conducted a cross-sectional study from April to October 2018 of adult patients on pharmacologic management for known hypertension at 7 public health facilities in Kweneng East District, Botswana. Our aims included to evaluate the frequency of uncontrolled hypertension, the frequency and type of medication errors causing discrepancies between patient-reported and prescribed antihypertensive medications, and the association between medication errors and uncontrolled hypertension. Descriptive analyses and multivariable logistic regression were used. The prevalence of uncontrolled hypertension was 55% among 280 enrolled adult patients, and 95 (34%) had &#x2265;1 medication error. The most common errors included patients taking medications incorrectly (11.1%; 31/280), patients omitting medications (7.9%; 22/280), and unfilled prescriptions caused by pharmacy stock outs (7.5%%; 21/280). Uncontrolled hypertension was significantly associated with having &#x2265;1 medication error compared with no errors (adjusted odds ratio, 3.26; 95% CI, 1.75-6.06; <i>P</i> &lt;0.001). <br><strong>Conclusions <br></strong> Medication errors are strongly associated with poor blood pressure control in this setting. Further research is warranted to assess whether medication reconciliation and other low-cost interventions addressing root causes of medication errors can improve the control of hypertension and other chronic conditions in low- and middle-income countries.