Article Text

Original research
Exploring the potential for introducing home monitoring of blood pressure during pregnancy into maternity care: current views and experiences of staff—a qualitative study
  1. Lisa Hinton1,
  2. James Hodgkinson2,
  3. Katherine L Tucker3,
  4. Linda Rozmovits4,
  5. Lucy Chappell5,
  6. Sheila Greenfield2,
  7. Christine McCourt6,
  8. Jane Sandall7,
  9. Richard J McManus3
  1. 1THIS Institute, Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
  2. 2Primary Care Clinical Sciences, Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
  3. 3Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
  4. 4Freelance Researcher, Montreal, Québec, Canada
  5. 5Women’s Health Academic Centre, King’s College, London, UK
  6. 6Department of Midwifery and Child Health, City University of London, London, UK
  7. 7Department of Women and Children’s Health, Kings College, London, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Lisa Hinton; lisa.hinton{at}thisinstitute.cam.ac.uk

Abstract

Objective One in 20 women are affected by pre-eclampsia, a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity, death and premature birth worldwide. Diagnosis is made from monitoring blood pressure (BP) and urine and symptoms at antenatal visits after 20 weeks of pregnancy. There are no randomised data from contemporary trials to guide the efficacy of self-monitoring of BP (SMBP) in pregnancy. We explored the perspectives of maternity staff to understand the context and health system challenges to introducing and implementing SMBP in maternity care, ahead of undertaking a trial.

Design Exploratory study using a qualitative approach.

Setting Eight hospitals, English National Health Service.

Participants Obstetricians, community and hospital midwives, pharmacists, trainee doctors (n=147).

Methods Semi-structured interviews with site research team members and clinicians, interviews and focus group discussions. Rapid content and thematic analysis undertaken.

Results The main themes to emerge around SMBP include (1) different BP changes in pregnancy, (2) reliability and accuracy of BP monitoring, (3) anticipated impact of SMBP on women, (4) anticipated impact of SMBP on the antenatal care system, (5) caution, uncertainty and evidence, (6) concerns over action/inaction and patient safety.

Conclusions The potential impact of SMBP on maternity services is profound although nuanced. While introducing SMBP does not reduce the responsibility clinicians have for women’s health, it may enhance the responsibilities and agency of pregnant women, and introduces a new set of relationships into maternity care. This is a new space for reconfiguration of roles, mutual expectations and the relationships between and responsibilities of healthcare providers and women.

Trial registration number NCT03334149.

  • hypertension
  • organisation of health services
  • maternal medicine
  • qualitative research
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Strengths and limitations of this study

  • Qualitative study to explore maternity staff perspectives on self-monitoring of blood pressure in pregnancy.

  • Diverse sample includes voices from across multidisciplinary maternity teams.

  • Focus groups held across eight hospitals in the English National Health Services, including hospital and community midwives.

Introduction

Raised blood pressure (BP) in pregnancy affects around 1 in 10 women, almost half of whom develop pre-eclampsia, a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity, death and premature birth worldwide.1 2 Diagnosis is made from monitoring BP and urine and symptoms at antenatal visits after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Self-monitoring of BP (SMBP) in the general population has become more common and large trials have demonstrated its effectiveness in terms of BP control.3 Since the 2011 UK national guidance for the general population with hypertension there has been a growing acceptance by clinicians of using SMBP values. Primary care physicians report an increasing use of SMBP to diagnose hypertension and for the ongoing management of hypertension to monitor BP control.4–7

But what are the implications of introducing SMBP for women during or after pregnancy, to improve the detection and management of gestational hypertension and pre-eclampsia? Pregnant women are different from the general population: BP can rise rapidly during pregnancy, and the problems associated with this (such as pre-eclampsia, eclampsia and stroke) are potentially serious. Pilot work in the UK suggests, with support from midwives and doctors, it is feasible and acceptable for women to monitor their BP and urine safely, potentially identifying hypertension earlier and controlling BP better.8–10 SMBP during pregnancy is becoming common in some settings. A Canadian pilot study found more than 60% of women diagnosed with non-proteinuric hypertension in pregnancy were already undertaking SMBP.11 The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada provides guidelines for SMBP in pregnancy and most Canadian obstetricians and primary care physicians used SMBP to assess for white coat hypertension (WCH),12 but its place in other countries is not yet clear.13

While SMBP in pregnancy is already implemented in some UK settings,14 there are no adequately powered randomised data from contemporary trials to guide the efficacy of such methods. Our early work exploring women’s experiences of taking part in an SMBP pilot study15 showed that most found their health professionals to be supportive, although in some cases self-monitoring results were ignored. An understanding of the attitudes of individuals and the organisation will be paramount in introducing new, and safe, models of care. Ahead of undertaking a large trial of BP monitoring in high-risk pregnancy to improve detection and monitoring of hypertension, we undertook a study to explore the perspectives of staff across the maternity care pathway to explore the context and health system challenges to introducing and implementing SMBP in maternity care.10 16 17

Methods

We carried out an intervention development phase in preparation for a large trial of SMBP in pregnancy, using qualitative methods, with the aim of understanding the views and prior experience of clinicians regarding such monitoring. This involved interviews and focus groups across eight participating teaching and urban general district hospitals that serve diverse populations (table 1). We conducted face-to-face interviews with a lead consultant obstetrician at each site (n=8) and a series of focus groups and interviews with a wide range of healthcare professionals.

Table 1

Study sample

Sample/setting

We sought a broad pragmatic sample that included community and hospital-based midwives and obstetricians of different seniorities at each site (n=147). All focus groups and interviews took place at hospital or health centre sites, either as part of, or after, existing meetings or during shift breaks. It was usually a Research Midwife at each site who identified who might be available with some of the larger focus groups piggy-backing on existing meetings. Sampling was therefore convenience rather than purposive, though we ensured there was a representation of senior and junior obstetricians, and hospital and community midwives from each site. Most participants had not previously engaged in studies on SMBP. Focus group size ranged from 2 to 15 individuals (see table 1). Some focus groups had a mix of obstetricians and midwives participating, reflecting the multidisciplinary teams providing care to women during pregnancy. Although an obstetrican is the lead clinician for almost all women with additional risk factors in pregnancy, the midwife is the conduit of care throughout pregnancy, labour and the postnatal period.18

Data collection

The interviews and focus groups were facilitated by two experienced, post-doctoral social science/non-clinical researchers (LH and JH) and audio-recorded for transcription and analysis. A topic guide was developed drawing on the literature, our prior work and in discussion with the multidisciplinary trial team (see Topic Guide, online supplemental file). Questions sought to explore issues around staff views on SMBP in pregnancy, the accuracy of home readings, how to manage care of women who present with home readings (particularly those discordant with clinic readings), the impact of home readings on clinical decision-making and workload, as well as practical issues around operationalising and integrating self-monitoring into current care pathways. Ethical approval and informed consent was obtained.

Analysis

All interviews and discussions were transcribed for analysis, which was conducted in two phases. An initial rapid analysis was undertaken to guide trial development.19 This used templates developed by JH and LH based on the topic guides and subsequently refined after a period of piloting. We conducted a rapid content analysis to identify evidence related to the a priori concepts and emergent themes that would then guide development of the study. This was discussed and refined with the wider research team. In a subsequent phase LH and JH, in discussion with the wider team, developed a coding frame and worked in parallel (with LR) to code and analyse the data.20 Thematic analysis was undertaken to explore the anticipated and emergent themes and was then mapped back to the framework, supported by NVIVO.21 22 LH and JH met frequently to discuss the results together and then with the wider team to confirm the credibility and dependability of the analysis. Data collection continued until data saturation was reached for the themes reported in this paper.23 Interviews and focus groups were analysed as a single dataset, reflecting the multidisciplinary teams providing care to women with additional risk factors in pregnancy. Results are presented as staff views, with illustrative quotes presented in table 2.

Table 2

Quotations

Patient and public involvement

This paper reports a substudy of a programme of intervention development work for the Blood pressure monitoring in high-risk pregnancy to improve the detection and monitoring of hypertension (BUMP) trials.24 There was no direct patient involvement in the research reported here, as the focus was staff views and experiences. However, patient priorities were central to developing the trials and intervention development work reported elsewhere.25

Results

We heard views from a total of 147 healthcare professionals providing maternity care in the English National Health Service, of whom 37 were physicians (including principal investigators (PIs) and students) 109 midwives and one pharmacist (see table 1). Our findings suggest SMBP during pregnancy was not yet a widespread practice across the sites included. However, some midwives and obstetricians reported occasional pregnant women who were already self-monitoring, either of their own volition or because they had been advised to because of previous experiences of pre-eclampsia, WCH, or pre-existing hypertension. The main themes to emerge around SMBP were (1) different BP changes in pregnancy, (2) reliability and accuracy of BP monitoring, (3) anticipated impact of SMBP on women, (4) anticipated impact of SMBP on the antenatal care system, (5) caution, uncertainty and evidence, (6) concerns over action/inaction and patient safety.

Interpreting BP changes in pregnancy

BP fluctuation

Staff emphasised that BP is different in pregnancy than at other times in women’s lives. It fluctuates throughout pregnancy and these fluctuations are normal. However, BP in pregnancy can change rapidly, precipitating a medical emergency for mother and baby. While antenatal care staff will be familiar with this phenomenon through their training and experience, women may not be. There was concern women could have difficulty interpreting results and deciding when to seek acute care.

In the general population, BP readings are used to guide care and medication changes over the long term, but in pregnancy the situation is more dynamic. Some were interested in the wider context home BP readings would give them, in particular, feeling women with WCH might get more typical readings at home. However, several indicated they would tend to privilege their own clinic readings as they reflected the situation happening immediately in front of them.

Wider symptoms

Staff were also concerned that BP is not the only factor in diagnosing hypertension or pre-eclampsia but rather one piece of a diagnostic ‘jigsaw’. Healthcare professionals stressed the importance of ensuring women were alert to the wide range of symptoms (eg, headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, proteinuria) and would act on those even if their BP appeared to be in the normal range.

Reliability and accuracy

The reliability and accuracy of machines were key concerns for staff, as well as whether women would monitor their BP correctly and respond appropriately. Many raised concerns about the quality of home BP monitors, whether women were using one of the relatively few validated for use in pregnancy, and whether they were properly calibrated. There were concerns about appropriate cuff size, particularly for women with a high body mass index. Other factors identified as potentially impacting the reliability and accuracy of home readings included women’s practices and the context in which they took readings (did they sit correctly, choose a quiet time of day?).

Views on the impact on women

Staff had a range of perceptions about how pregnant women might feel about being asked to self-monitor their BP. Some anticipated women being happy to participate and enjoying a sense of agency, control and reassurance over their own healthcare. Others raised concern that women may experience increased anxiety and become obsessed about their BP. Some felt pregnant women expect care to be led by providers and asking them to monitor their own BP would be perceived as a way of abdicating responsibility. Although staff also acknowledged the potential for empowerment, some expressed concern that asking women to self-monitor would contribute to an over-medicalisation of pregnancy in contrast with the evolution of antenatal care away from this model in recent years.

Many potentially positive impacts for women were identified both in terms of quality of experience and better outcomes for mother and baby. These included fewer medical appointments, shorter waiting times and avoiding hospitalisation. Staff acknowledged detecting BP increases earlier would have the potential to deliver better outcomes for both mothers and babies, but confirmed definitive evidence of these outcomes would be needed before they could commit to changing their practice.

Anticipated impact on antenatal care

Staff were caught between feeling SMBP could reassure women, so cutting ‘worried well’ visits and/or raise anxieties, thus increasing them. So, while they recognised other potential health system benefits including fewer women coming into clinic, thus freeing up clinic time in hospital and in community care, they also raised various concerns around the impact of SMBP on antenatal care pathways and their workload. These included a rise in phone calls to maternity assessment units and an increased demand for care, particularly from the ‘worried well’.

Staff were aware that, ahead of definitive trial results, these reflections were hypothetical. Their currently available best comparator was their experience with women’s self-monitoring for gestational diabetes, which is now quite common. Some described SMBP as a challenge to their professional roles, particularly for midwives, and part of wider changes towards increasing self-care and personal responsibility in health. One consultant described the shifting responsibilities in antenatal care, with health education now as much a part of routine care as systematic screening for obstetric complications.

Caution, uncertainty and evidence

While staff were generally open to looking at home BP readings, most were mindful the evidence was not yet available as to how to treat these readings in conjunction with clinic readings. Most felt they could only treat home readings as additional rather than as core information, not directing care decisions, but contributing extra detail to the ‘jigsaw’.

Caution

Many midwives said that if self-monitoring readings were discrepant with clinic readings, they would privilege the readings they had just taken themselves. Most added they would take into account the home readings, though exactly how would be considered on a case-by-case basis. Some would use them as part of improving understanding of the wider context, but use their clinic reading for the decision on whether to admit a woman to hospital. The home reading would not be used for treatment decisions but could influence how often an obstetrician felt it necessary to see a woman.

Some acknowledged the potential of SMBP to identify WCH. But in several midwife discussions, consensus emerged on the side of caution, such as referring women onwards or taking bloods if only one type of reading (clinic or home) was high. Others referred to local protocols and guidelines although this was often interpreted as needing to act on any higher reading, implying caution and a focus on patient safety, with fear of being considered negligent explicitly raised by one midwife.

Some said they verified home readings by testing the device used by women alongside their clinic monitor. Several midwives commented they would have to respect a woman’s readings, as to do otherwise could affect mutual trust.

Uncertainty

There was awareness that pre-eclampsia is a variable condition in which the speed of disease progression varies considerably. Some felt SMBP could significantly mitigate some of these uncertainties. One senior obstetrician specifically alluded to a potential advantage of SMBP being its ability to reduce uncertainty by enabling clinicians to make objective assessment of how accurate clinic readings are, clarifying who has WCH, assessing the effectiveness of treatment and standardising the various clinical environments that women might be seen in. Yet others clearly feared SMBP could increase uncertainty (discrepancy in readings), and/or lead to overcaution and overtreatment on the part of less experienced colleagues.

Different approaches to managing hypertension in pregnancy also emerged. While some make judgements on a case-by-case basis, privileging the extent of change from baseline, the wider context, and individualised pathways, and given that different hospitals may have their own guidelines, others described a practice defined by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines and the use of thresholds as the defining guide in when to intervene.26

Evidence

Numerous staff raised the need for additional and improved evidence. One obstetrician observed that guidelines are supposed to be evidence based but recommendations are often made on expert opinion. A different senior obstetrician also suggested that people practise defensively, leading to many unnecessary blood tests being done because a greater number of healthcare professionals (midwives and junior doctors) are able to request the tests, and because when women have been told they may have pre-eclampsia, heightened anxiety leads to repeated checks for reassurance. Overall, there was a distinct lack of consensus, but with a clear wish from many for more evidence to reduce uncertainty.

Concerns over action/inaction

While a shift to SMBP is in keeping with wider trends towards self-care and personal responsibility, working through this new balance of responsibility for acting on readings was a cause for concern. Staff raised concerns about women not acting on readings, through either not realising they required urgent action, not wanting to bother busy staff or not wanting to be hospitalised. There were concerns about women ignoring problems, or being falsely reassured by one reading and ignoring the wider context. Many stressed the importance of women having a clear understanding of what they were supposed to do if their readings were high, with a clear pathway for women presenting with high BP based on home readings.

Many staff made comparisons with home monitoring of blood glucose in gestational diabetes, either as a useful precedent for SMBP or evidence of the challenges of women deliberately or inadvertently coming in with inaccurate results.

Others expressed the view that it is hospital policy (as well as being the health professional’s view) that they would rather ask women to come in for comprehensive assessment than have the woman check her BP at home and decide not to come in.

Discussion

Main findings

Antenatal care staff were generally in favour of asking women to monitor their own BP at home, but flagged concerns about the potential impacts on women and staff workload, the reliability and accuracy of readings and the need for clarity about how the information would be used by clinicians. Many emphasised the importance of ensuring women understood what to do in the event of readings that cause concern and provided examples of other situations where women had failed to act in acute situations because they did not understand the severity of the situation or rationalised away the need to seek medical attention. Some voiced concerns about women becoming either anxious or falsely reassured by self-monitoring. There was a feeling that SMBP might only be for a select few as it will require a shift in thinking about who takes responsibility for the woman’s health.

Many of the issues raised were specific to pregnancy. However, concerns about the potential for monitoring leading to anxiety may also exist for the general population, though previous studies have not found evidence to support this.27 These could be intensified when there may be additional anxiety related to the effect of BP changes on the baby. Concerns about device accuracy were well founded as relatively few monitors on the market are validated in pregnancy.28 The need to consider more than just BP and the dynamic nature of BP in pregnancy as opposed to BP in the general population means that failure to act has the potential for devastating consequences for both woman and baby. Yet, resistance to medicalisation may be heightened in a previously healthy younger population of ‘women’ as opposed to ‘patients’.29 Continuity of care is an ambition not always achieved in maternity care. The lack of an established relationship of trust between women/patients and healthcare professionals that is typical of hypertension management in primary care, further complicates the situation.30 Staff are therefore understandably cautious and uncertain, while also willing to see the potential for SMBP to reduce uncertainty and add usefully to available evidence.

Strengths and limitations

A strength of this study is the breadth of multidisciplinary voices across the maternity care pathway captured, spanning eight differently located hospitals in England. This has given rich insights into the potential challenges of introducing SMBP into maternity care from the perspectives of different disciplines and locales. Our two-stage approach to analysis, led by social scientists with expert clinical input from coauthors in obstetrics, midwifery and primary care, has also enhanced the interpretive strength of the findings. Limitations include the challenges of holding focus group discussions with busy professionals engaged with frontline care. These are vital perspectives to capture but there were inevitably challenges in terms of finding time and space for some focus group discussions.

There are several literatures to draw on in interpreting these results.

Responsibilisation

To date, measuring and monitoring women’s BP in pregnancy has been a central component of the healthcare professional’s role in antenatal care. To include women’s home readings into these care pathways represents a significant shift in the balance of responsibility. Emerging literature that explores the shifts and implications of health ‘responsibilisation’ are of relevance. Shifts in the balance of responsibility have the potential to disrupt long established care pathways and can be experienced both positively as well as negatively as surveillance.31 Exploring the impacts of these shifts is a live issue in the sociological literature from studies of ‘park runs’ to HIV management,32 33 and the relationships between social workers and vulnerable youth.34 Drawing on work by Garrett, Liebenberg et al explored the impact of shifts in neo-liberal systems, where individuals are expected to manage their own risks and demonstrate self-care. ‘These shifts impact on the roles that health professionals play, from active management to encouraging/teaching of the skills of management’.35 Newman et al's study of young people with HIV revealed narratives of responsibilisation that can give rise to contest between young people and their clinicians.33 In exploring the impact of telecare on the management of long term conditions, Rogers et al concluded ‘Indeed a paradox of the reliance and acceptance of telecare is the creation of new relationships and dependencies rather than the diminution of reliance envisaged by policy.’36 Our findings on clinician caution and concerns over inaction, indicate that these shifts in responsibility could have profound impacts that we need to be alive to as we further explore the impact of this work going forward.37

Impact on professional roles

A shift in responsibility for BP monitoring may also have an impact on professional roles and identity. Concern over these impacts ran through various themes we have reported, including impact on workload, caution and uncertainty and location of expertise. Task shifting is a key issue in many healthcare settings, but it does not emerge seamlessly as revealed in the literature.38–41 How SMBP impacts on these professional roles, and how professionals behave when there is a shift in the locus of responsibility will need to be the focus for future work.

Patient safety

While staff raised concerns about the impact of SMBP on patient safety, these concerns were expressed in the context of an emerging evidence base for SMBP.13 17 As this develops, we draw on evidence that points to the considerable scope for improving patient and family contributions to the detection and management of acute illness.42 Delayed recognition and treatment of conditions such as pneumonia and meningitis in childhood,43 pre‐eclampsia and reduced fetal movements during pregnancy and after childbirth44 45 and heart disease and stroke in adulthood,46 47 contribute significantly to the mortality and morbidity burden. These conditions typically present with a time‐critical window for early recognition and response, and are associated with red flag signs and symptoms (such as breathlessness and pain) which can signify a serious underlying condition and act as potential markers to aid patient and family involvement in escalation of care. However, research has shown there are challenges to speaking up and raising safety alerts in maternity care and that organisation-focused efforts are required to improve staff responsiveness.48

Conclusions

We need to be mindful that the impact of SMBP on maternity services could be profound although nuanced. While its introduction will not reduce the responsibility clinicians have for women’s health, it promises to enhance the responsibilities and agency of women, and introduces a new set of relationships into maternity care. We cannot simply look to the literature and experiences of SMBP in other populations (eg, such as hypertension outside of pregnancy) because of the very nature of BP changes in pregnancy and because this is a healthy population, unless specifically indicated otherwise. This is, then, a new space for reconfiguration of roles, mutual expectations, and the relationships between, and responsibilities of, healthcare providers and mothers.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank all NHS staff who gave their time to contribute to this study.

References

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

    This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.

Footnotes

  • Contributors LH, JH, KLT, LC, SG, CM, JS, LR and RJM conceived the study, secured the funding and were involved in the planning and carrying out the study. LH and JH conducted the interviews and focus groups and KLT managed the study. LH, JH and LR analysed the data with input from the wider authorship. LH and JH drafted the paper. All authors commented on drafts and writing up the work.

  • Funding This article represents independent research commissioned by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Programme for Applied Research (RP-PG-0614-20005). Richard McManus was and Lucy Chappell is supported by a Research Professorship from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR-RP-R2-12-015 and RP-2014-05-019, respectively). Richard McManus in an NIHR Senior Investigator. Lisa Hinton, Katherine Tucker and Richard McManus have received funding from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care Oxford at Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust and NIHR Oxford Thames Valley Applied Research Collaboration. Lisa Hinton was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Biomedical Research Centre (BRC). Jane Sandall is a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Senior Investigator and is supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration South London (NIHR ARC South London) at King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the National Institute for Health Research or the Department of Health.

  • Competing interests RJM has received BP monitors for research from Omron.

  • Patient consent for publication Not required.

  • Ethics approval A favourable ethical review for this study was obtained from South Central—Oxford C Research Ethics Committee (16/SC/0386). Written informed consent was gained from individuals who agreed to take part.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Data availability statement Data are available upon reasonable request. The interview transcripts are held by the University of Oxford and available at reasonable request.

  • Supplemental material This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.