TY - JOUR T1 - Treatment Burden in People with Hypertension is Correlated with Patient Experience with Self-Management JF - The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine JO - J Am Board Fam Med SP - 1243 LP - 1245 DO - 10.3122/jabfm.2021.06.210191 VL - 34 IS - 6 AU - Elizabeth A. Rogers AU - Hani Abi AU - Mark Linzer AU - David T. Eton Y1 - 2021/11/01 UR - http://www.jabfm.org/content/34/6/1243.abstract N2 - Introduction: New hypertension guidelines in the United States may require more people to take multiple medications or implement lifestyle changes. Increased treatment burden may be an unintended consequence and lead to worse health outcomes. Our study examined whether treatment burden is associated with factors related to self-management in those with hypertension.Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional mailed survey of patients from 2 medical centers in Minnesota. Participants with 2 or more medical conditions completed the Patient Experience with Treatment and Self-management (PETS), a validated treatment burden questionnaire, as well as measures of confidence in self-management ability, health literacy, health care-related financial difficulties, and perception of provider interpersonal skills. We used partial correlation analyses, controlling for age, sex, race, and education, to test relationships among study variables.Results: Of 254 respondents who had a diagnosis of hypertension, 54% were female, 74% were non-Hispanic White, and the mean age was 67 years. People with hypertension who reported having lower confidence in self-management ability, lower health literacy, more financial difficulties, and health care providers with poorer interpersonal skills reported higher treatment burden scores (PETS scales correlation magnitude range 0.09 to 0.62, P < .05 on all but 4). The strongest associations were observed for medical information and physical/mental exhaustion with self-management (correlation magnitudes from 0.25 to 0.54, P < .01).Discussion: Hypertension treatment guideline stringent blood pressure criteria may lead to more interventions—medical or lifestyle—creating strains on populations already challenged by abstract disease self-management and at risk of experiencing disparities in cardiovascular health outcomes. ER -