Can texting new parents to report their blood pressure help address maternal mortality? These doctors think so – The Mercury News

Sarah Gantz | The Philadelphia Inquirer (TNS)

PHILADELPHIA — Two Penn Medicine physicians had an unorthodox idea for reducing the number of patients who develop dangerously high blood pressure in the weeks after giving birth: Stop asking them to come into the doctor’s office for blood pressure screenings.

Dangerously high blood pressure, is a leading cause of maternal death and hospital-readmission after birth, and is often preventable with routine screening. But many new parents are too overwhelmed in the first days of their baby’s life to get themselves to extra medical appointments.

Physicians Sindhu Srinivas and Adi Hirshberg decided to instead send patients home with blood pressure cuffs and instructions for how to report their readings by text message twice daily for 10 days.

Ten years later, the results are so impressive, Penn has made it standard practice across its eight hospitals. The program, called Heart Safe Motherhood, has been nationally recognized with awards from the American Heart Association and American Hospital Association, among others. And now, it’s being used at other Philadelphia hospitals, including Thomas Jefferson University Hospital and Jefferson Einstein Philadelphia Hospital.

More than 18,000 Penn patients have participated since the program launched in 2014. It’s credited with nearly eliminating the rate at which postpartum patients are readmitted for blood pressure complications within a week of giving birth, and closed a racial disparity gap that left many more Black patients at risk of severe complications.

The reason: More patients are following through on blood pressure screening after childbirth. Fewer wind up back in the hospital because doctors are able to spot danger signs and intervene sooner.

“We’re empowering the patient,” said Hirshberg, the director of obstetrical services at Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. “We couldn’t do it without the monitors, but an important part of the program is the education of why we’re doing it.”

Shortly after Victoria Batista’s son was born, she developed a splitting headache, her vision was blurry, and she tripped walking through her home in Philadelphia. She attributed it all to being exhausted after a 67-hour labor that ended in a C-section, and the stress of caring for a newborn, her first.

“All these signs were pointing to having an issue, but I kept glossing over them,” said Batista, 32. “And then I got a notification: Check your blood pressure.”

She had so much going on she didn’t want to bother, but knew that her phone would just keep buzzing until she responded.

Batista punched in the numbers: 220/110, blood pressure so critically high she was at risk of a stroke. Within 10 minutes, someone at Penn called, telling her she needed to get to the hospital immediately.

“Had it not been for that program, for them harassing me about it — almost — I could have died,” she said.

Addressing maternal death disparities

The program is an emerging solution to sobering statistics that show Black Americans remain more than twice as likely to die during pregnancy or childbirth, or in the following months, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The disparity persisted despite a national decline in maternal mortality rates in 2022.

Handing out blood pressure cuffs alone won’t solve a national maternal mortality crisis. But the Heart Safe Motherhood program has reduced readmissions for blood pressure complications among Penn’s postpartum patients from 5% to 1%.

Philadelphia institutions say the Heart Safe Motherhood program has also helped them understand how to better connect with patients and potentially make inroads addressing other deadly postpartum complications.

Jefferson launched the program in late 2021, and Einstein’s Philadelphia campus followed in spring 2022.

Response from patients and providers has been overwhelmingly positive, said Anneliese Gualtieri, the patient safety and performance improvement coordinator for obstetrics and gynecology at Einstein.

“You’re actually partnering with the patient in their care, which is something that patients like — to be part of their own solution,” she said.

Catching symptoms early

Jasmine Hudson, a nurse practitioner at Penn’s diabetes center, gave birth to her second child at Penn in May 2023. She credits the Heart Safe Motherhood program for saving her life days later.

Hudson took home the blood pressure cuff nurses offered and diligently responded to the text prompts with her blood pressure reading.

An automated algorithm analyzes the blood pressure readings patients send in and flags abnormal results to doctors.

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