Focus on today's evidence while keeping an eye on the future: lessons derived from hypertension in women.
Gloria ValdésPublished in: Journal of human hypertension (2022)
While evidence-based medicine has contributed enormously to the uniformity and rationale of patient care, it is necessary that we anticipate changes in order to implement their rapid translation to practice. The purpose of this review is to expose three issues regarding cardiovascular health in women, including milestones to reflect the pace at which these are incorporated into public policies. Two of these matters, as changes in the thresholds of normal blood pressure in gestation and in nonpregnant women, need further evidence and deserve to be retrospectively analyzed in high-quality databases. The third subject derives from the association of remote cardiovascular complications of hypertensive pregnancies, an example of the unnecessary delay of more than two decades to install a wide prevention strategy when the health system is not on the watch.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- pregnancy outcomes
- healthcare
- hypertensive patients
- primary care
- heart rate
- clinical trial
- preterm infants
- pregnant women
- breast cancer risk
- gestational age
- emergency department
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- preterm birth
- current status
- machine learning
- big data
- quality improvement
- sensitive detection
- artificial intelligence
- quantum dots