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Pregnancy Hypertens ; 22: 30-36, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32717653

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In women at risk of developing preeclampsia, we evaluated the use of a digital health platform for telemonitoring blood pressure and symptoms combined with a minimal antenatal visit schedule. STUDY DESIGN: A case-control study for women with chronic hypertension, history of preeclampsia, or maternal cardiac or kidney disease. A care path was designed with reduced visits enhanced with a digital platform (SAFE@HOME) for daily blood pressure and symptom monitoring starting from 16 weeks of gestation. Home-measurements were monitored in-hospital by obstetric professionals, taking actions upon alarming results. This prospective SAFE@HOME group was compared to a retrospective control group managed without self-monitoring. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Primary: healthcare consumption (number of antenatal visits, ultrasounds, admissions and diagnostics), user experiences of the platform. Secondary: maternal and perinatal outcomes. RESULTS: Baseline characteristics of the SAFE@HOME (n = 103) and control group (n = 133) were comparable. In the SAFE@HOME group, antenatal visits (mean 13.7 vs 16.0, p < 0.001) and ultrasounds (6.3 vs 7.4, p = 0.005) were lower compared to the control group. Admissions for hypertension or suspected preeclampsia were significantly fewer in the SAFE@HOME group (2.9% versus 13.5%, p = 0.004). Telemonitoring participants were highly satisfied using the platform. No differences were observed for maternal and perinatal outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Our care path including blood pressure telemonitoring for women at risk of preeclampsia allows fewer antenatal visits, ultrasounds and hypertension-related admissions. We observed no differences in perinatal outcomes. These results suggest that telemonitoring of blood pressure is feasible in a high-risk pregnant population and has the potential to profoundly change antenatal care.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory/methods , Pre-Eclampsia/therapy , Prenatal Care/methods , Telemedicine/methods , Adult , Case-Control Studies , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Patient Satisfaction , Pregnancy , Prospective Studies
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