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Priorities for research on hypertension care delivery: a WHO report executive summary | Journal Article / Short Report | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Short Report

Priorities for research on hypertension care delivery: a WHO report executive summary

Matsushita K, Angell SY, Appel LJ, Bygrave H, Cohn J, Kalyesubula R, Kaur P, Moran AE, Mswema M, Schoj V, Schutte AE, Shao R, Zhang XH, Ordunez P, Khan T

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

In 2024, the World Health Organization released a report on Priorities for Research on Hypertension Care Delivery. This article provides its executive summary.


METHODS

The World Health Organization and its technical experts formed a leadership team, developed a scope and objectives, created a thematic framework, developed a survey for each theme, and identified research priorities. The 5 themes included (1) Health care workforce for hypertension care delivery, (2) Service delivery system/models, (3) Patient retention/adherence, (4) Financing the care delivery system, and (5) Research gaps identified in the World Health Organization 2021 Hypertension Guideline. The leadership team received feedback from diverse experts through webinars and online surveys. The final report was peer-reviewed by external experts.


RESULTS

According to postwebinar surveys, we identified 5 to 7 research priorities within each theme, totaling 29 research priorities. The 10 highest priorities were (1) Cost-effectiveness of combination therapy in low/middle-income countries, (2) A system allowing hypertension care closer to home, (3) Health system reform allowing trained community health workers to refill/initiate/titrate antihypertensive medications, (4) Health system reform allowing nurses to diagnose and treat hypertension, (5) Gaps in the medication supply chain, (6) New approaches integrating the management of hypertension and other diseases, (7) Digital approaches for improving medication adherence, (8) Optimal approaches to train health care workers, (9) Approaches to finance hypertension control programs, and (10) Implementation research on task-sharing approaches.


CONCLUSIONS

These research priorities provide guidance to researchers, with immediate implications for substantially improve hypertension care and prevent its sequelae. We urge governments, funding agencies, and organizations to consider supporting these research topics.

Subject Area

non-communicable diseaseoperational researchhypertension

Languages

English
DOI
10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.125.24702
Published Date
20 Mar 2025
PubMed ID
40109247
Journal
Journal of Human Hypertension
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